Strategic partners: Enhancing the ability of foster care agencies to serve the special needs of young mothers

•Three foster care agencies sought to improve capacity to serve pregnant and parenting women in care.•Passport to Parenting enhanced young women’s parenting skills, confidence, and resources.•Young women believed the system supports their dependency and sees them with suspicion.•Staff felt the initi...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Children and youth services review Vol. 110; p. 104808
Main Authors: Lieberman, Lisa D., Kaplan, Alejandra, Scholey, Laura, Kohomban, Jeremy, Lausell-Bryant, Linda
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Oxford Elsevier Ltd 01-03-2020
Elsevier Science Ltd
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Summary:•Three foster care agencies sought to improve capacity to serve pregnant and parenting women in care.•Passport to Parenting enhanced young women’s parenting skills, confidence, and resources.•Young women believed the system supports their dependency and sees them with suspicion.•Staff felt the initiative built capacity to serve unique needs of young mothers in care. Parenting teens and young women who are in or transitioning out of foster care face unique challenges. Three NYC child welfare agencies created the Passport to Parenting (P2P) initiative in 2011 in a strategic partnership designed to build capacity to serve the special needs of pregnant and parenting teens. The program included direct services to young mothers, staff development and technical support by one agency that had historically served this unique population. A qualitative program evaluation was conducted, including focus groups with 36 parenting young women who had participated in P2P services and interviews with 11 key staff of the three partnering agencies. Qualitative data were coded through thematic analysis. Despite significant changes in leadership, structure, and staffing across the partner agencies over the project period, a strong collaboration and partnership persisted, serving the myriad needs of this unique population. From the young women’s perspective, the provider agencies’ programming had enhanced their parenting skills, confidence, and resources. At the same time, they reflected on a child welfare system that sometimes supported their dependency and, to protect their babies, often saw them with suspicion. With a commitment to services ranging from pregnancy prevention to parenting, mental health, mentoring, and educational, financial, and other instrumental programming, the Passport to Parenting (P2P) initiative provided opportunities for growth and support for young mothers, within a child welfare system that faces many challenges to meeting its own standards of care for pregnant and parenting teens in the system.
ISSN:0190-7409
1873-7765
DOI:10.1016/j.childyouth.2020.104808