Pre-adoption Medical Assessment

Q: What kind of referral information will I receive about a child available for adoption, and how do I assess it?

A: Adoption plans for children are made for a variety of reasons, including poverty, single-parent households, previous abuse and neglect, maternal physical and mental illness, drug and alcohol abuse (both prior to and after birth), and legal regulations of a given country. These reasons become factors in a child's medical, developmental, and psychological future. That's why it's important to seek and understand a pre-adoption medical review. A review will address your concerns about the health of a child and help you give your child the best care.

Although many families focus on the country of a child's birth in assessing health and development, this factor is not as important as the individual situation of a given child. Premature birth, poor prenatal nutrition, and living in an orphanage all play into the present and future health of a child. Families adopting outside the United States need to realize that children available for adoption overseas may have the same risk factors as children adopted from our own foster-care system.

 

What you'll get

Medical information that accompanies adoption referrals varies in depth, content, and accuracy.

 

 

What to watch for

 

Putting it together

Prospective adoptive parents often seek out a physician with experience in adoption and foster-care medicine who will review medical-referral information to determine what other (if any) information is needed to make an informed decision. Many such physicians are members of the American Academy of Pediatrics Section on Adoption and Foster Care (www.aap.org/sections/adoption), and are available for consultation before you travel.

Even with the most complete medical referral, there are still uncertainties ahead. While an objective review of the health information will help you decide whether you are able to provide a good home for a child, adoption is ultimately a leap of faith. Children who come with a past that may influence their future will do best in a loving home prepared to meet their challenges.

Deborah Borchers, M.D., is a founding member of the American Academy of Pediatrics Section on Adoption and Foster Care, and the mother of three children adopted internationally.

© 2013 Adoptive Families. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part is prohibited.

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