Article 4YM3C Kinship carers feel invisible in debate about looked-after children | Letters

Kinship carers feel invisible in debate about looked-after children | Letters

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Letters
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We get minimal support, writes Janet Kay, while Lucy Peake says that if kinship carers can't continue, that risks a lot of children entering the care system

Why is it that none of the recent articles about the potential crisis in numbers of children in care mention the many children who have narrowly avoided the care system because they have been diverted from one "broken system" to another (Looked-after children are falling through the cracks of a broken system, 24 January)? There are very many children in kinship care who would be boosting those alarming statistics if relatives and friends had not taken on their care.

And yet kinship carers get no preparation or training, the assessment is brief and shallow in comparison to adoption assessments, and we are usually very unprepared for our role. We get minimal support (and sometimes none) throughout the often hasty placement process, and post-placement support is like hens' teeth.

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