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- <text id=90TT1484>
- <title>
- June 04, 1990: When The Lullaby Ends
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- June 04, 1990 Gorbachev:In The Eye Of The Storm
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ETHICS, Page 82
- When the Lullaby Ends
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Should adoptive parents be able to return unwanted children?
- </p>
- <p>By Andrea Sachs--With reporting by Michele Donley/Chicago and
- Janice C. Simpson/New York
- </p>
- <p> Most eleven-year-olds don't have a lawyer, but Tony is a
- special case. His adoptive parents decided five years after his
- adoption that Tony had not properly "bonded" with them, and
- returned him to the state in March. They kept Sam, Tony's
- natural younger brother. Patrick Murphy, the Chicago public
- guardian who was appointed to serve as Tony's attorney, says
- the youngster is an "absolute joy to be around." But there have
- been scars. Says Murphy: "One of the tragic things is that Tony
- blames himself."
- </p>
- <p> Tony is one of at least 1,000 children adopted in the U.S.
- each year who will be returned to agencies by their new
- parents. Some are sent back because of unmet expectations,
- others because they have severe emotional problems the parents
- cannot handle. In a risk-averse age when consumer standards
- have become more exacting and family commitments seem less
- binding, there is a danger that adopted children could be
- viewed as commodities that come with an implied warranty. The
- problem presents a major challenge for the legal system. "This
- is not a question of damaged goods; it's a matter of what's in
- the best interest of the child," says Neil Cogan of Southern
- Methodist law school.
- </p>
- <p> Social workers used to believe that all an adopted child
- needed was a loving home. But now many admit that even the most
- committed parents may be overwhelmed by unexpected problems.
- In 1986 Dan and Rhonda Stanton adopted a blond baby girl they
- named Stacey Rene. "We thought we had a perfect baby because
- she didn't cry," says Dan, an insurance agent in suburban
- Dallas. Their contentment faded as the months passed and Stacey
- did not develop properly. She didn't babble and laugh like
- their friends' babies and couldn't pinch with her individual
- fingers. The tentative diagnosis: Rett's syndrome, a rare
- genetic disorder in which the brain stops growing. Devastated,
- the Stantons took Stacey back to the agency and have not seen
- her since. "We made a commitment to her, but we were not able
- to live up to that commitment," says Rhonda. "She turned out
- to be totally different from what we thought we had adopted."
- </p>
- <p> If adoptive parents are saddled with an unforeseen defect,
- who should shoulder the load? Most experts put the onus on the
- adoptive parents. "Families, having decided to do an adoption,
- assume a certain risk," says Professor William Winslade of the
- University of Texas Medical School in Galveston. "If it is an
- incredibly difficult burden, it seems unfair not to give
- parents, who have provided the benefit to society by making the
- adoption, some special help. But I don't think the burden
- should be totally given back to the state either. Parents adopt
- because they want the joys--and the sorrows--of having
- children."
- </p>
- <p> About 2% of all adoptions in the U.S. fail. But for older
- children and children with special needs, the numbers are far
- higher. For children older than two, 10% of the adoptions are
- dissolved. For ages twelve to 17, the rate shoots up to around
- 24%. This poses a special problem, since healthy adoptable
- babies are increasingly scarce owing to the fact that more
- single women now opt to have abortions or to keep their
- infants. More families are therefore adopting older or
- handicapped children. This seems to be a main cause of the
- growing return-to-sender phenomenon.
- </p>
- <p> As the problem of disrupted adoptions spreads, specialists
- are looking more closely at agency methods. One cause for
- failure is a practice that Berkeley Professor Richard Barth
- describes as "stretching." In essence, it is a bait-and-switch
- game: would-be parents are encouraged to adopt a child
- different from the one they wanted by the withholding of some
- negative information. For example, a couple who want a baby are
- persuaded to take an older child and never told that several
- earlier placements have not worked out because of emotional
- problems. Though the motive is benevolent--finding a home for
- a hard-to-place child--Barth regards the tactic as unethical.
- </p>
- <p> Some disappointed parents have begun to fight back in the
- courts. The notion of "wrongful adoption"--which claims that
- agencies are liable for damages if they place children without
- fully disclosing their health backgrounds--is gaining legal
- recognition. Frank and Jayne Gibbs of Philadelphia are suing
- two agencies for $6 million, following their adoption of a
- seven-year-old boy who turned out to be violently disturbed.
- After the adoption, say the couple, they discovered that he had
- been horribly abused, including an attempt by his natural
- mother to cut off his genitals.
- </p>
- <p> Many states have passed medical disclosure laws, which make
- it easier to obtain accurate information about a child.
- Agencies themselves are attempting to gather more data. The
- Golden Cradle adoption agency, in Cherry Hill, N.J., requires
- natural mothers to fill out ten-page medical histories that ask
- about everything from hay fever and heavy drinking to Down's
- syndrome and blood transfusions. Genetic counselors are often
- called in as consultants. "We believe an ounce of prevention is
- worth a pound of cure," says agency supervisor Mary Anne Giello.
- </p>
- <p> Still, there are no warranties on adoptions. Those who set
- out looking for perfect "designer" children are likely to be
- disappointed. Nor is it possible--or even necessary--to
- know everything about a child. "People shouldn't get the idea
- that they can't be parents unless they have a DNA profile of
- a kid," says Professor Joan Hollinger of the University of
- Detroit law school. Instead adoptive parents, armed with as
- much information as possible, should face the inevitable
- mysteries--just as all parents do.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-