May 29, 2012
Almost ten percent of children live with
relatives/friends for some period of time and twenty percent of black children
do. The study also argued that relative placement is better for children regardless of label (but it did not necessarily make the "better" assertion in direct comparison to anything) because kin care minimizes shock and adjustment difficulties for children moving from home.
In Florida, about four percent of all children in the
state are in some type of kincare which is consistent with national figures
however, 43 percent of all children in foster care in the Sunshine State are in “state-supervised kinship foster care” which is the second-highest percentage
in the country (Hawai’i is at 46 percent).
*The national percentage of children in the foster care system living
with relatives is 26 percent.
The study also cites data from the Census Bureau that
indicates that relative caregiver situations are at-risk of being poorer,
isolated, older, under educated and underemployed than in situations where even
just one of parent is present.
To read the entire study and learn more about kinship care, please click on this urlink for more.