Abstract
A sample of 18 women and men who accompanied their foster or adopted children with severe developmental disabilities to a medical appointment at Henry Ford's Multidisciplinary Care Clinic during the one-year period and who reported during that appointment that they currently had residing with them at least three foster or adopted children with special needs are described in the context of their parental role vis-a-vis these children. Results of the study are presented through use of a six-part organizational scheme: demographic and social traits of the parents and their focal children (the children being seen at the Clinic that day), the focal children in family context, life satisfactions of the parents, foster or adoption motives (whichever applied), foster or adoption satisfactions, and parental sentiments regarding the children as a group.
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Goetting, A., Goetting, M.G. Voluntary parents to multiple children with special needs: A profile. J Child Fam Stud 2, 353–369 (1993). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01321231
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01321231