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Adoptive Families 10 Steps to Adoption
by Chris Adamec

Courtesy of Adoptive Families (AF) magazine

From The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Adoption (Alpha Books, 1998), by Chris Adamec. Adamec is also the author of The Adoption Option: Complete Handbook, 2000 –2001. (Prima Publications 1999).

Adoptive Families (AF) magazine is the nation's leading publication for pre/post-adoptive families. AF is published bi-monthly and is a four-time winner of the Parent's Choice Award. AF magazine was acquired by New Hope Communications, LLC in February, 2001 and is now headed by Susan Caughman. Headquartered in New York City, AF magazine has a growing subscriber base of almost 30,000.

For more information on Adoptive Families Magazine and the 2001 Guide To Adoption go to: http://www.adoptivefamiliesmagazine.com or call: 212-877-1839

Carrie Howard is a writer and editor who lives in the Seattle area. She and her husband have two daughters who were adopted internationally.

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1. Forget everything you’ve heard about how impossible or hard it is to adopt. Today adoption is an option for people of all backgrounds and lifestyles.

2. Decide whether you want to adopt a baby, an older child, a child with special needs or a child of another race. There are all kinds of children out there who need families.

3. If you want to adopt your child from the U.S., make sure you understand the adoption laws in your state. 4. Consider international adoption. Thousands of children worldwide need parents.

If you’d like to pursue international adoption, there are specialized adoption agencies that can help you. 5. Do your homework. Find agencies and adoption experts in your area. Ask for brochures or handouts. Attend seminars. Join local adoptive parent support groups.

6. Tell friends, family, colleagues, physicians and everyone else that you want to adopt. Ask them to think of you if they hear of anyone who may want a child adopted.

7. Screen any adoption agency or attorney that you are thinking about using. Ask for references and check to see if any complaints have been made. Maintain a healthy skepticism.

8. Keep your cool during the home study investigation. Remember that no parents are perfect. Use the experience as an exercise in self-exploration.

9. When you hear about a child you might adopt, ask questions about the child’s health and early life experiences. Learn as much as you can about the birth parents.

10. Your child arrives! Congratulations! Enjoy parenting and your new life together.


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Review: When a child is adopted as a toddler, his needs and those of his adoptive family are different from the needs seen in infant or school-age adoptions. Yet few resources are available to deal with these special issues. In this work, Hopkins-Best, a child development expert and mother of a child adopted as a toddler, provides a guidebook for those considering toddler adoption or those already struggling with its special challenges .

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Description: This is a good book to give to family & friends before they have an opportunity to stick their feet in their mouths. Another plus is that the author addresses families who adopt after infertility, gay & lesbian headed families, single-parent families, and interracial families. .

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