Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10071/35585
Author(s): Alves, S.
Camilo, C.
Pereira, L.
Correia, M.
Araújo, K.
Ornelas, S.
Justo, M.
Grangeia, H.
Negrão, M.
Baptista, J.
Date: 2025
Title: Perceptions about family foster care and intention of becoming a foster family: A short report
Journal title: Child Abuse Review
Volume: 34
Number: 6
Reference: Alves, S., Camilo, C., Pereira, L., Correia, M., Araújo, K., Ornelas, S., Justo, M., Grangeia, H., Negrão, M., & Baptista, J. (2025). Perceptions about family foster care and intention of becoming a foster family: A short report. Child Abuse Review, 34(6), Article e70075. https://doi.org/10.1002/car.70075
ISSN: 0952-9136
DOI (Digital Object Identifier): 10.1002/car.70075
Keywords: Family foster care
Foster family
Intention
Perceptions
Recruitmentcommunity sample
Abstract: Family foster care (FFC) is associated with positive developmental outcomes for children. However, the recruitment and retention of foster families prepared to respond to children's needs are a cross-cutting challenge worldwide and require a better understanding of which factors may influence it. This study analysed the associations between personal characteristics, perceptions about FFC and intention of becoming a foster family in a community sample. A total of 348 Portuguese adults completed an online cross-sectional survey. Participants completed the Integrated Model of Family Foster Care-Perceptions about Family Foster Scale (MIAF-PFFS; ProChild CoLAB & SCML, 2024), comprising five dimensions (perceptions about caregiving, about foster children, about the biological family, about the foster family and about the decision-making process) and answered two questions reporting on their intention of becoming a foster family. Female participants, with higher education, and with children reported higher intention for fostering. More adequate perceptions about caregiving, the biological family and the decision-making process were associated with higher intention for fostering. Regression analyses showed that being female, having children and more adequate perceptions of caregiving of foster children were the factors that most contributed to the intention for fostering. These results highlight how specific perceptions of FFC can enhance individuals' intention for fostering, thus informing targeted recruitment strategies.
Peerreviewed: yes
Access type: Open Access
Appears in Collections:CIS-RI - Artigos em revistas científicas internacionais com arbitragem científica

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