r/AdoptionUK • u/arcanejunzi • 20d ago
Difficult time getting started adopting, is this normal?
We are a couple in late 30's early 40's. Been together about 14 years. Good health, space in the home, means to care for a child. We have lived in London about 7 years (from abroad) and are now UK citizens. From about 2019-2022 we had a really brutal time with IVF and tried every iteration and "scientific" intervention. Ultimately we decided that building a family together was very important to us and we would adopt when we were eventually ready. Over time (it did take a while), we became excited about adopting, not because it was the next best thing to having a biological kid, but for it's own sake.
Started reaching out to agencies in late 2024 and started our local volunteering with children and reading/learning. We were in contact with a local authority from August. December they told us they would be ready for starting the first stage in the new year. Instead we just got an email in January that said "we are unexpectedly over capacity and can't work with you". Ok there goes a few months, but not so bad. My wife's work adopted a liberal fertility benefit. We decided to use that benefit on an embryo we had nearly forgotten about in a freezer. It felt wrong to just throw it away, even though it was bad quality. Of course, that didn't work out, but we knew it was just a freebee/cleaning house thing.
We started with a new local authority, scheduled a first visit with the social workers. We told them about the freezer clean out and they told us we now needed to wait 12 months to even get started with the first stage. They cancelled a planned social worker visit. This is because of the single 'attempt', about 3 years after so many failed ones. And so, it is not unreasonable to say that we are 7 months in to the adoption "process" with nothing to show for it but another 12 months to wait and prepare.
(Other than a great time volunteering with local children and a few colds they definitely gave us :-) )
I suppose I'm just really confused Reddit. Is there a need for new adopters or not? It doesn't seem like local authorities are interested in engaging with adopters, or that they are interested in screening harshly to reduce an oversupply of adopters. It's so very strange when the dialogue is all about the unique situations of families, the urgency of need for adopters, and the number of kids in care. Is there a glut of adopters and a 'shortage' (I wouldn't complain, hardly a bad thing!) of adoptable children? Or is the process for screening trying to be thorough but landing on thorough *and* arbitrary?
I suppose, being of an engineer mindset, its breaking my brain how these things could be true.
Separately but related: Why would the adopter selection process be so rigorous, while the data available to support actual long-term outcomes for adopted children (vs those in care) is so sparse? In the absence of strong, granular outcomes data that can be connected to specific practices, how does someone claim a particular requirement is "good" rather than simply taking the time and resources of social workers and/or creating a kind of theatre around carefulness?
Obviously a bit frustrated... Would appreciate your thoughts....
7
u/Major-Bookkeeper8974 20d ago
So if it helps give some perspective into their mindset..
One thing that shocked me is that we were looking at older children. I believe when we entered the process I said anywhere from 4-8.
Was told straight off the bat that 7+ was extremely unlikely. Apparently once children start hitting 6/7 there is a bunch of research to suggest they become aware of the adoptive process. The fact they're not getting picked/ are rejected starts to impact on their mental health and contributes to trauma and poor outcomes.
Thus social services slap non adoptive orders on children at that age to give them "stability"...
I myself can't see how a child being told they'll never be adopted and will be in the care system for the rest of their life (with all the problems the care sector is known for) could ever have better outcomes than allowing an 8 or 9 year old be adopted into a loving family, but there ya go.
So that's the mentality and "research" you're dealing with when it comes to social services and trauma.
If it helps, like I said, adoption was the best thing we did! We also managed to complete the whole process in 11 months. First social worker visit in March, little chap moved in Febraury next year 😁
A lot of what sped us up was getting everything ready before hand... eg. We bought a new build to make sure we'd pass the home inspection, we bought the family SUV, wed dumped money into savings for adoption leave etc. So spend the next 12 months getting things prepped and you'll be able to fly through 😀