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Advice for Parents of Post Institutionalized Children
Tips and Tactics to help your child adjust
November 01,2006 / George Rogu M.D
Untitled Document

Adopting a post-institutionalized child is a challenging undertaking. Though there are techniques and tips that work best with particular age groups, there are a number of general practices that have been proven to help children of all ages adapt more readily to their new families, culture and environment. The following tips have been comprised to guide families during the crucial time period immediately following adoption.

The most critical advice adoptive parents of older children MUST absorb is this: Your desire for an instant-happy family is unrealistic. The entire focus must be on the needs of the child. With patience and consistency over time, the family will come together as a cohesive unit.

 

•  Immediately during the post-adoption period, do not over stimulate the child. Avoid trips to toy-r-us, Disneyland , and large gatherings. When exposed to this type of environment children tend to have meltdown, hyperactive and out of control.

•  Child should be placed in a well-structured routine. A chore-list (photos of duties posted in a bathroom are good), consistent times for meals, play, and school are all vitally important.

•  Families should stay home with child for as long as possible.

•  Expose the child only to close family members during the post-adoption period. Parents and siblings ONLY are preferable.

•  One parent should be home with the child for the first couple of months.

•  Exposure to both parents is optimal as long as it is as financially feasible.

•  Avoid daycare immediately after arrival

•  Try to communicate during the first 2-3 months in the child native language. Finding an interpreter and learning basic phrases before the child arrives home is essential.

•  Do not try to force the child to learn English right away, it will come in it own time.

•  Child should stay home with a primary parent as opposed to a nanny or babysitter.

•  If available, have the child socialize with a child from a similar institutional setting and culture.

•  Older children should be enrolled in school as soon as possible.

•  Post-Institutionalized children tend to become fixated on junk food, such as hot dogs, sweets, chips and soda immediately. Let them eat but not just what they want or like. Set limits. Since they have never had junk food, it becomes an obsession.

•  Initially try to recreate the diet that the children had in the orphanage. Gradually transition them to your families diet slowly over time. Food is the language of love for these children. Withholding the foods they are most familiar with can be damaging to the initial bonding.

•  In regards to television, avoid shows that have aggressive tendencies. Disney type movies are usually calm, have good language are funny and have good moral values. Children tend to imitate things that they see. Having them watch power rangers is almost a guarantee to have a power ranger in your living room wrecking your furniture very soon.

•  Children need to earn activities and privileges based on their daily performances. Good behaviors need to be rewarded and bad behavior needs to be gently punished by taking away privileges like favorite toys, games for short period of times. Never ever use corporal punishment.

Consistency and complete dedication towards the best interest of the child are mandatory. The immediate gratification of the parents to form a family unit needs to be delayed temporarily. This will help to promote a good long-term prognosis for the post-institutionalized child.

Additional information and references:

1) Miller, L. (2004). The Handbook of International Adoption Medicine: A Guide for Physicians, Parents, and Providers. Oxford University Press, Cary, NC.

2) Federici, R. (2001) Raising the post institutionalized child: Risks, Challenges, and Innovative Treatment.

by George Rogu M.D.

Disclaimer

The information and advice provided is intended to be general information, NOT as advice on how to deal with a particular child's situation and or problem. If your child has a specific problem you need to ask your pediatrician about it - only after a careful history and physical exam can a medical diagnosis and/or treatment plan be made. This Web site does not constitute a physician-patient relationship.

Adoptiondoctors.com is an innovative International Adoption Private Practice dedicated to helping parents and adoption agencies with the complex pre-adoption medical issues of internationally adopted children.

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Readers Comments  (11 Comments)  View All Comments
If all of these suggestions truly comprised the only method of enabling an adopted child to adapt, it would be impossible for single parents to adopt. Most single parents do not have the luxury of staying home for months with their child. I have three daughters adopted at different ages (infancy, age 10, age 4). Despite the fact that I returned to work in a month after each adoption, and used daycare liberally, all three girls are well-adjusted and attached, with no behavior problems. - Marie Carmenati
We adopted 3 from Russia in summer of 2004. 8, 10, 12 yr. We also have 2 other adopted kids & 2 bio kids. It has been an adventure, many times nerve-racking. Cacooning with the children immediately upon return to USA is essential. They each need large doses of time. The best book we've read that changed our lives and ways of working with our children is love based: "Beyond Consequences, Logic and Control" by Heather T. Forbes and Brian Post. Order on their website: www.beyondconsequences.com- Kris
Karen Re: Food Control. I would never run an article that gave the impression that food should be restricted. Orphanage kids need to eat, eat, eat. I think the author is trying to emphasize that while food should be available at all time and freely given---the balance should lean heavily on the side of having lots of healthy food available.- MarthaO
I don't agree with some of the recommendations, such as sending an older child to school as soon as possible. My experience was the opposite...we worked on the attachment piece before sending her to school which was most beneficial for her. Also, I do not agree with Disney movie recommendations because many of them do not promote a family stance. Many of these movies are missing the mother figure who is very important for post institutional child.- Robin Gillis
While many of the ideas were great, I strongly disagree with the suggestion to send an older child to school immediately. As the mother of 13, 8 through adoption and most of those of older kids, I think it is critical to work on family relationships first. That is very difficult if the child is away from home for 7+ hours a day. - Chris
We adopted twin 7-year-olds from Russia in 2003. These sugestions just scratch the surface. For more practical in-depth help I would reccomend a book by Nancy Thomas called "When Love is Not Enough". It was the help in this book coupled with the undying support of my parents who provided extensive respite and encouragement that prevented us from taking the children back to the orpahange in desparation. Three years later we are finally having a sense of normalcy.- Cheryl
Further, the incentive of earning and taking away activities does not always motivate my son. Perhaps when you've had so little in life, it is not surprising that you can do without something for a long time. Re: trying to control food, my son would get on a chair, go in the freezer and eat a frozen loaf of bread, etc. or go through the trash. Again, control of food is easier said then done. 7 years later; food is still a big issue for him. - Karen
I read similar suggestions when I adopted my son at age 7, 7 years ago. I also adopted a 4 year old last year. Given the pshychology of these kids, I think they are legitimate suggestions. But, given the reality, these suggestions are somewhat unrealistic and contradictory. If you get the children in school right away, how do you limit their exposure to others? Also, such children's are stressful. If it wasn't for family members helping out, we would not have had any respite. - Karen
helped me as we are with a new 4 year odl son from a small ethich group from Guatemala.- sula crabb
We just brought home our 8 year old son from Russia, so this is a timely article for our family. I'd love to see more articles that talk about the really short term: The first two weeks for so. I find that time was the most stressful and exhausting and even though I was told it would be so, I had no idea. It's worth it, though!- Lili
Thanks for the words of wisdom. We are waiting to bring home our four year old daughter from China. I'm sure these tips will be so helpful.- Tracie
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