Brief Trends in Service Receipt
Subtitle
Children in Kinship Care Gaining Ground
Regan Main, Jennifer Ehrle Macomber, Rob Geen
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The standard of living for children in kinship care improved significantly between 1997 and 2002, according to analyses of the National Survey of America's Families. The portion of children in kinship care living in poverty steadily declined. Similarly, findings reveal a downward trend in the portion of children in kinship care who did not have health insurance. Both of these trends were more pronounced for children in kinship arrangements that involved a child welfare agency than those that did not, though both groups' improvements were more dramatic than the gains made by children living with their parents.
Research and Evidence Family and Financial Well-Being Housing and Communities Tax and Income Supports
Expertise Families Social Safety Net Early Childhood Child Welfare
Tags Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) Economic well-being Family and household data Family structure Child welfare Children and youth