Puerto Rico
Why Do Abused Children Have a Higher Incidence of Asthma

Have you noticed that your adopted children who were abused and/or traumatized prior to adoption seem to have a higher incidence of asthma than other children do? I have noticed over the years that children new to my home tend to get sick frequently, especially during the first year of placement. While I hadn’t thought about asthma specifically, shortly after becoming a foster parent I became the owner of a nebulizer. Over the last 14 years, that nebulizer has had quite a workout, so I suppose there is something to it. New research in Puerto Rico indicates that children who have suffered sexual and/or physical abuse have double the average risk of developing asthma. In Boston, Harvard Medical School’s Dr. Juan C. Celedon and his colleagues want pediatricians to screen victims of child abuse automatically for asthma. More importantly, they want pediatricians to be aware that children with asthma may have suffered, or be victims of, child abuse.
Foster Care Adoption Statistics

About 3 years ago I completed the PRIDE training (Julie my fellow blogger is current taking these classes.) and completed my home study. I was approved to adopt from foster care. There were 3 different paths to take; fostering, foster to adopt and adoption. I decided to take the adoption path.
I knew my odds were lowered by doing this. I just didn’t bother to research just how much lower.
From October 1 2004 to September 30, 2005, 40,928 foster care adoptions were tracked by 42 states based on the adoptive parent’s relationship to the child.



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