Open Adoption Research
A Child's Waiting open adoption agency offers the following open adoption research and information for birth parents and adoptive families who may be considering this type of child adoption.
1) Dr. Ruth McRoy of the University of Texas in Austin has
reported
that in their
five year
study of over 500 triad members, that children of open adoptions
have a more positive image of their birth mother.
2) Adoptive
parents with
fully open
adoptions
are less
fearful of
the stability of their adoption, and more comfortable talking
about adoption, than closed adoption parents. In an article
published in "Family
Process", a professional journal,
the June
1994 issue
(pp 141-142),
it was reported
from this
same research by Dr. McRoy that:
"The strong general pattern is
that parents
in fully disclosed adoptions demonstrate higher degrees of
empathy about adoption, talk about it more openly with their
children, and are less fearful that the birth mother might
try to reclaim her child than are parents in confidential
adoptions. The sense of permanence in the relationship with
their adopted child also followed this pattern..."
3) Dr. Marianne
Berry reports from the California Longitudinal Study on Adoption
(an ongoing study of 1300 people started in 1988) that children
of open adoptions are reported to have fewer behavioral problems
than children of closed adoptions.
4) Dr. Anu Sharma of the Search Institute in Minneapolis
(a 35 year old non-profit family research center) reports
that information issues are a major preoccupation for adolescent
adoptees from closed adoptions. In asking open ended questions
as to the adoption related issues that concerned them most,
both adoptees and their parents listed the lack of information
as issues that concerned them the most. In this study 65%
of adoptees wanted to meet their birth mother.
5) All major national adoption conferences in the U.S. are
presenting open adoption practice as the healthiest adoption
method for the sake of the adoptee.