Have you considered adopting a child or becoming a foster parent? Maybe you’ve recently welcomed a child into your home and have some questions about what they might be feeling. Psychologist Dr. Annie Wright specializes in helping children with adjustment, attachment, anxiety, depression and trauma, and has focused her research on helping children who have been adopted or in foster care.
The experience of adoption can have an impact on a child’s attachment and identity development, which can affect mental health. We see increased rates of anxiety and depression among individuals who’ve been adopted. Separation from a pre-adoption caregiver can be traumatic as well, resulting in trauma responses from youth as they cope with their post-adoption life.
The age at adoption can influence the child through the timing of pre-adoption experiences. For example, institutional care (orphanages, children’s homes, etc.) can be associated with deprivation and lack of opportunities to form healthy attachments. If children are exposed to this when they’re very young it can cause long term effects such as developmental delays and attachment difficulties. Children adopted at an early age can recover from the deprivation they experienced if provided with substantial supports to foster healthy development.
Kids who experience trauma that results in their adoption at a later age (e.g. orphaned during their teen years) may have had positive experiences that buffer the effect of trauma. Conversely, children who are adopted at a later age and have experienced chronic trauma or abuse prior to the adoption may have much more significant mental health needs following adoption. Every situation is unique.
Each type of adoption (private domestic, foster care, international) has unique aspects to consider when it comes to a child’s mental health. Children who experience foster care have faced some sort of trauma and/or abuse that resulted in their removal from their home. This could include direct abuse toward the child, indirect trauma through witnessing violence and substance use in an unsafe home, or the trauma of separation from a caregiver who is incarcerated, among other possibilities. This isn’t to say that children adopted out of other circumstances have not experienced these things.
Youth adopted internationally have likely experienced traumatic loss of a caregiver, institutionalized care prior to adoption, and then immigration into a foreign country and culture. This comes with a host of unique experiences that pose risks to their mental health.
Children who are adopted privately and domestically at birth haven’t experienced immigration or early abuse and neglect, but they still face separation from their biological mother which is significantly stressful. It results in potential loss of information regarding their history (health, family lineage, etc.), disconnection from family culture, and the missed experience of being raised in a family that looks like them. All of these can impact an individual’s identity development and mental health across all stages of their life.
Adopted children face a host of difficulties that many non-adopted individuals don’t experience or even consider.
Bringing a child into a new setting can pose some challenges for families as well.
Fostering a stable, consistent, safe, predictable, loving home is key for building resilience and positive relationships among family members. Parents who balance providing love and warmth through their parenting while also outlining clear rules and expectations for the child and being consistent in how they respond to a child’s behavior will help to build resilience. Parents need to be highly informed when it comes to trauma and adoptive identity development before pursuing adoption, so they’re ready to understand the context to their child’s behaviors and emotional struggles once a child is placed in their home. Being well-versed in emotion coping skills that they can model and teach a child will help set the child up for success.
There’s a lot of work parents can do before adopting to set themselves and their future adopted child up for the best outcomes possible, such as:
Other adults in an adoptee’s life can help to mitigate risk and build positive relationships by becoming more adoption-informed themselves (and parents can help educate the network around a child).
The adjustment time can range from months to years and really varies based on the child and the expectation for what it means to have adjusted to a new home. There may be a “honeymoon phase” in which the child appears to have adjusted quickly and well; this is a trauma response, and adoptees will later describe this period as highly stressful – not at all a honeymoon from their end. New and potentially disruptive or difficult behaviors may begin to appear months after an adoption, indicating that the adopted child has finally become comfortable enough in their new home to truly express how they’re feeling. This can feel jarring for parents who thought things had transitioned smoothly, and then may worry this is a different side that the child was masking. This is just another stage of the transition, and with ongoing consistency/love/safety from parents, the child will learn how to cope with their feelings in a safe and appropriate way in the new home.
As with any child, it’s important to be consistent. The best parenting comes from a balance of warmth and control. Adoptive parents shouldn’t reduce rules or expectations to seem more fun or win affection. However, they should be aware that certain caregiver approaches to discipline or expression of negative emotion when a challenging behavior is displayed may be triggering for a child and escalate things further.
It's important for parents to learn how to remain emotionally regulated throughout stressful parenting interactions. For children who have experienced trauma or neglect, it is also important for parents to be able to evaluate the underlying need beneath a behavior and work to meet that need. As parents get to know a child they can also predict when these needs will appear, so they can adjust to meet the needs before they result in challenging behaviors.
Adoption is not a singular event, and the adoptee will spend their life processing and adjusting/adapting to this aspect of their history. A child may seem well-adjusted during one stage of childhood and then enter a new stage of development and begin to struggle in ways they hadn’t (or didn’t seem to) previously – even into adulthood. Parents shouldn’t internalize their adopted child’s struggles as criticism or rejection of the adoptive family, but give their adopted child the space, grace and loving support to process and explore this significant aspect of their individual identity.