© British Association of Social Workers
The Supply of Foster Families for Children in Care
Andrew Bebbington is a Senior Research Fellow and Assistant Director of the Personal Social Services Research Unit at the University of Kent at Canterbury.
John Miles works in the Institute of Social and Applied Psychology. University of Kent at Canterbury.
Correspondence to John Miles, Institute of Social and Applied Psychology, The University, Canterbury, Kent CT2 7LZ.
Summary
The family circumstances of 2694 foster homes in England are compared with representative families from the 1985 General Household Survey. Foster families typically include a woman in the 3155 age group, live in homes with three or more bedrooms, are two parent families with one parent working full-time and the other not, and they have older children only. The incidence of families with these characteristics is used to develop an estimator of the relative supply position of local authority areas for foster care, from which a number of conclusions are drawn. Over the last thirty years some social changes have improved the supply, others decreased it, and on balance the national supply position is little changed. Ironically, supply is best in those areas which have the lowest need for fostering services. Ways in which local authorities can improve their supply position are considered. The supply estimator reveals that the average boarding out payments made by authorities show clear signs of responsiveness to the local supply position for foster families.
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