Family Forums
Parenting Forums
Pregnancy Forums
Adoption Forums
Fertility Forums






Members List Photos Events Local Adoption Support Search Arcade Reviews Membership Upgrade
Welcome to the Forums. Register
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ. You may have to register before you can post or search: click here to proceed. To start viewing messages, select a forum below that you would like to view or click View All of Todays Posts.
Forum Categories
User Name
Password

Reply
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1  
Old 10-27-2005, 06:55 PM
amyfk's Avatar
amyfk amyfk is offline
amyfk
Join Date: Sep 2004
Posts: 3,079
Total Points: 84,411.17
Donate
how can you prevent adopting child with health problems as much as possible?

Hi to the Group,

Lately Ive been reading some Russian adoption posts(mainly on another site) and theyve been talking a lot about FASD FAE RAD etc.

I know that there is a higher incidence of problems when adopting a child from Russia, and there are no 100% guarantees when you adopt concering health(or when you give birth).

Anyway, we feel that there are some conditions we are willing to accept and are able to handle more than others. Is there ways to minimize the chance of accepting a referral that we don't feel as comfortable with?

Thanks,
Amy, NJ
__________________

Adopted baby Joanna from Tver Region 10/06
Reply With Quote
Click Here to Learn More
Russia Adoption Information

  #2  
Old 10-27-2005, 07:10 PM
cici32 cici32 is offline
Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2004
Posts: 470
Total Points: 1,948.95
Donate
When we filled out our paperwork we said we were willing to accept a child with curable illnesses. We also made sure we had an IA doctor review any and all medical information, pictures, videos that we received before we told our agency we wanted to continue with the adoption. If there is something that the IA doctor tells you that you are not comfortable with than let your agency know that the child isn't for you. They will understand because they do not want you to accept a referral that you don't feel comfortable adopting. The IA doctors are good and many of them are available to call while you are on trip one if you have questions. Again, if you go on trip one and you don't feel the child is the right one for your family than contact your agency and they will guide you through the steps you need to take. I know some who have gotten to see another referral while on trip 1 and some who have to come home and wait for another one.

My advice is to really discuss what medical conditions you are willing to accept, make sure you really know what is involved with those conditions and make sure you are honest with your agency. You don't have to accept a child if you do not feel they are the right fit for your family.
__________________
Missy, Jeff and Andrei

Home forever...September 23, 2005
Reply With Quote
  #3  
Old 10-27-2005, 07:21 PM
kretzklan's Avatar
kretzklan kretzklan is offline
always searching

Join Date: Sep 2005
Posts: 3,740
Total Points: 59,818.77
Donate
I agree with the previous post. You really set the parameters for what referals you'll accept and then use the expertise of an IA doc.
__________________
"When life gives you lemons, you make lemonade. I have several stands." James Brady
http://kretzklan.blogspot.com/
Reply With Quote
  #4  
Old 10-27-2005, 07:41 PM
hadams's Avatar
hadams hadams is offline
Mom of Two
Join Date: Apr 2004
Posts: 227
Total Points: 976.00
Donate
There are some things you can do to perhaps lessen the risk...but not remove it.

You can have the information you gather on your first trip reviewed by an experienced IA physician. Although I have read posts about parents who did this and still ended up with children who needed a lot of intervention.

Their are different combinations of events that can make some children more prone to being RAD than others. Length of time in an institution, and the quality of care in an institution can sometimes be used as measures for probability of RAD.

You can, by involvement on other groups, like the Yahoo regional groups, network with other parents who have adopted from the same orphanage who can give you some insight into the accuracy and completeness of the health information presented. They can also give you information on the quality of care.

You can become very familiar with age appropriate milestones, and know what to look for in terms of growth and skills in children the same age as your referral.

You can seek out a program that allows you a lot of time to visit with your child on the first trip, so that you will have more opportunities to assess your child.

But when all is said and done, it is still a gamble.

FAS is a spectrum disorder. A child could be profoundly affected or simply have problems doing math. The quicker the diagnosis, and the more intervention that is done, the better chance the child will have to succeed.

RAD is a label sometimes applied differently by different people. Many would agree that all children who are adopted after being institutionalized will have attachment issues. Issues do not equal a disorder. Some parents, though diligent use of attachment techniques have turned a child with a RAD diagnosis into a loving engaging part of their family. Other families continue to struggle.

We are working on attachment issues, and probably will for years, yet neither of my children is RAD.

My heart always aches a little bit when this topic comes up. I remember being on your side and thinking the same thing: what if? Can we handle it? And, although I once had those same thoughts, now they make me cringe a bit.

I may have thought I wasn't prepared to parent a child who had such and such a diagnosis. Or had such and such a disorder. Now, I am parent of two children, and I am their parent regardless of diagnosis or disorder, and I will be for the rest of my life. Am I more prepared? No. But it doesn't matter.

There is nothing on my one-time list of things I wasn't prepared for that couldn't happen to either of my children tomorrow. A fall on the head, a freak fever, a car accident, whatever. So, do I stop being their mother because I am not prepared to parent a child with a wheel chair? No, I build some ramps, get my upper body strength back, and shuttle my child to physical therapy appointments 5 times a week.

Would it be easy? No. Would it put an incredible strain on my family, my marriage, my relationship with my other child? Yes. But would it be the end of my family, my marriage or my relationship with my other child? Not if I could help it.

I think better than worrying about not adopting a child of special needs, a better approach might be preparing yourself to parent a child of special needs. If my child has this diagnosis, I will need to do this, this and this. These are the community resources available to me. This is the internet community available to me. This is the best clinic around for dealing with these issues.

The information you gather will help you in assessing your referral, as well as prepare you to get help sooner if needed.

When we adopted our son, it was back in the day when you got a video of the child. Our little boy, eight months old at the time of filming, was filmed on the floor of his orphanage, in an ill-fitting ill-matched multi-layered outfit of onsie pajamas. He was rocking back and forth in a crawling position, but not crawling. He wasn't filmed sitting up. He drooled. He played with a ball in front of him passing it from one hand to the other, tracking it with his eyes.

We watched the video with our Denver Development chart in front of us, checking for this and that. There were so many things we couldn't check off...we watched again and again, trying to decide if the way he held his back leg was just the pajamas or if it was stiff or something.

After about the fourth or the fifth viewing, we started to notice his gurgle/giggle. We noticed the sworl in his hair, and wondered if it would be a huge cowlick (it is). We noticed how he flinched a bit when someone in the room banged something, and started to wish they would stop scaring him each time.

After we had seen it a half a dozen or so times, we started to say "what could someone say to us that would make us NOT want to take this boy home, to give him a chance, to love him, and care for him, and shelter him?" We went from looking for reasons to turn him down to daring anyone to try to get us to turn him down.

From that point on, for us, it simply didn't matter. He was and is ours, forever.
__________________
Holly
Adopted son in 11/01 from Novosibirsk at age 14 months
Adopted daughter in 4/04 from Novosibirsk at age 24 months
Reply With Quote
  #5  
Old 10-27-2005, 08:19 PM
amyfk's Avatar
amyfk amyfk is offline
amyfk
Join Date: Sep 2004
Posts: 3,079
Total Points: 84,411.17
Donate
thanks very much

Thanks very much to the previous posters. Much appreciated.

Amy, NJ
__________________

Adopted baby Joanna from Tver Region 10/06
Reply With Quote
Reply


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is Off
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are Off
Pingbacks are Off
Refbacks are Off

Points Per Thread View: 1.00
Points Per Thread: 15.00
Points Per Reply: 5.00


All times are GMT -7. The time now is 10:47 PM.