"Kinship families" refers to when relatives, such as grandparents, aunts, or uncles, take on the role of caring for children when their biological parents are unable to do so. It is a term used to describe the close bond and connection between family members who are not traditional parents but play a significant role in raising and supporting the children.
Full definition
The website also lists resources
for kinship families who want to learn about cultural competence in health - care practice.
The program was created specifically to address the needs of vulnerable young children in
kinship families who often need extra support and special services.
We partner with organisations that enhance our work and enable us to reach
more kinship families and have greater impact.
We provide support and resources to parent and youth group leaders and share information with adoptive, foster, and
kinship families about groups in their communities.
If foster /
kinship family misses a parent - training session, the material from the missed session is delivered during a home visit at a time convenient for the foster parent.
In addition, we encourage members to post their own events - like play dates and family outings as we build our foster, adoptive, and
kinship family community!
Join other public interest attorneys who
serve kinship families to expand partnerships, share best practices, and create better policies and laws.
We also offer support groups, education and clinical support
for kinship families (relatives raising related minors), such as grandparents raising grandchildren, to help them provide the best possible care.
It explores the experiences
of kinship families and draws comparison with findings from our 2010 survey What if we said no?
Navigating Kinship Care: A Resource Guide for
Kinship Families in Colorado provides local and statewide information about organizations and programs that may be useful for kinship caregivers.
KCRC will offer training to individuals who work
with kinship families through agencies and / or support entities each year using various methods to maximize access.
Child welfare systems can upgrade their services to foster and
kinship families by providing evidence - based support and parenting skills offered by the KEEP program.
While kinship care and adoption can be a wonderful option when children can not be cared for by their birth parents, C.A.S.E. therapists know that
kinship families face similar challenges to all adoptive families.
The Children of Alcoholics Foundation has created The Ties That Bind which is a training curriculum for caregivers focusing on parental substance abuse and the impact it has
on kinship families.
Enhancing Cultural Competence in Social Service Agencies: A Promising Approach to Serving Diverse Children and Families (PDF - 803 KB) Office of Planning, Research and Evaluation (2014) Provides an overview of the cultural competence of organizations serving children and families,
including kinship families, from diverse ethnic and racial backgrounds and offers considerations for improving services.
Using Customer Service Concepts to Enhance Recruitment and Retention Practices National Resource Center for Diligent Recruitment at AdoptUSKids (2013) Frames the relationship between child welfare agencies and foster, adoptive, and
kinship families through a customer service paradigm.
Texas Kincare Primer (PDF - 1,587 KB) Texas Legal Services Center, Texas Department of Aging and Disability Services, & Texas Kincare Taskforce (2013) Provides Texas kinship caregivers with information on caregiver rights and responsibilities, including
documents kinship families may need in seeking services, legal resources, State and Federal public benefits for kincare families, power of attorney, and early childhood intervention services.
An Early Childhood Education and Support Intervention for
Kinship Families Littlewood, Strozier, & Whittington (2014) Children and Youth Services Review, 38 View Abstract Highlights outcomes from the Kin As Teachers (KAT) Program, an early childhood education program specifically designed for children living with a grandparent or other relative.
Kinship Children's Home Network
Connects kinship families in Florida to services and support systems to increase family stability.
Kinship Resources Kids Matter, Inc. (2016) Lists resources that provide assistance to kinship caregivers, including grandparents raising grandchildren, young adults raising younger siblings, and all forms of
extended kinship families.
The Children's Defense Fund (CDF), in collaboration with 8 other resource organizations, have developed state Kinship Care Fact Sheets that contain information on kinship resources, services, and benefit program; state foster care policy
regarding kinship families; and state kinship care laws.
In 1999, plans for the center grew out of a series of research projects conducted by the late Dr. Robert Little on the policies and programs
affecting kinship families in Michigan.
Foster /
kinship family receives weekly Parent Daily Report Checklist calls by either the facilitator or co-facilitator to trouble shoot problems the foster parent was having in implementing the assignment, and to collect data on the child's problem behaviors during the past day.
It's called Kinship Connected, and helps local authorities support and
empower kinship families in their area through independent project worker and peer support.
The article discusses the strengths of Latino and other
immigrant kinship families due to their social networks, which include both close and distant relatives and friends that may be considered family, such as godparents.
The Adoption Navigator Program provides intensive support for adoptive, foster - adoptive and
kinship families around the child's initial transition to the home, placement, behavioral issues, family cohesion, adoption related issues, community resources, and more.
Betty is the founder of CANGRANDS, a national Canadian grass - roots organization dedicated to providing information and support to the 75,000 kinship children being raised by grandparents and other
kinship family members.
Kinship families often have different needs and face different challenges than families who adopt children unrelated to them.
Foster /
kinship family group sessions are structured so that the curriculum content is integrated into group discussions.
The Family First Act addresses the opioid epidemic, invests in prevention to help eliminate the need for family separation, ensures quality for group foster care settings, improves services for older youth, and better
supports kinship families.
It explores the experiences
of kinship families and draws comparison with findings from our 2010 survey What if we said no?Read more
The Children of Alcoholics Foundation has created a training curriculum for caregivers focusing on parental substance abuse and the impact it has
on kinship families.
About Blog The heart of our mission is to provide support, training and advocacy to meet the special needs of foster, adoptive and
kinship families who provide safe, stable and nurturing homes for children in foster care.
I offer play therapy for children ages 3 - 10, family therapy, parent training, and individual therapy for the following: ADHD and other child behavior problems; Parent / caregiver coaching and training; Grandparents raising grandchildren and
other kinship families; Family and blended family issues; Grief and trauma recovery, divorce and post-abortion trauma recovery.»
Kinship Care: Raising Children Washington State Department of Social and Health Services Lists services
for kinship families, including information and training on caregiving available through several resources in Washington.
Grandfamilies, or
kinship families, are families in which children reside with and are being raised by grandparents, other extended family members, and adults with whom they have a close family - like relationship such as godparents and close family friends.