This fact sheet gives you, the birth mother,
information about counseling and adoption. It addresses many
questions you might have:
- Who can I talk to about my options?
- Should I place my child for adoption?
- What are the different types of adoption?
- How do I arrange an adoption through an agency?
- How do I arrange a private adoption?
- What if my baby is a child of color?
- How do I arrange for future contact with my child if I want
it?
If you want more information on these adoption issues, or any
others, please contact the National Adoption Information
Clearinghouse at (703) 352-3488 or 1 (888) 251-0075, 330 C Street,
SW, Washington, D.C. 20447.
Who Can I Talk to About My Options?
If you want to talk to a professional about your options, there
are different places you can go. Counseling at the places listed
below will be free or cost very little.
- Crisis pregnancy center—This is a place where they
talk only to pregnant women. It might even have a maternity
center attached where you could live until the baby is born.
- Family planning clinic—This is a place where women get
birth control information or pregnancy tests.
- Adoption agency—This choice is good if you are already
leaning strongly in the direction of adoption.
- Health Department or Social Services—A food
stamps or welfare worker can tell you which clinic or department
is the right one.
- Mental health center or family service agency—Counselors
at these places help all kinds of people in all kinds of
situations.
No matter where you go for counseling, a counselor should always
treat you with respect and make you feel good about yourself. A
counselor may have strong feelings about adoption, abortion, and
parenting a child. Nevertheless, those feelings should not
influence their professional advice nor the treatment provided to
you. In order to make up your own mind, it is important for you to
get clear answers from your counselor to the three questions found
in the box below. The answers to these questions will help you
choose the best option.
| If I feel I cannot carry my pregnancy to
term, how will you help me?
If I decide to take care
of my baby myself, how will you help me do that?
If I want to place my baby for adoption, will you help me
find an adoption agency or attorney who will listen to what I
think is right for us? |
If you are not happy with the answers you get, you may wish to
find a counselor at another place. The Clearinghouse can tell you
about crisis pregnancy centers and adoption agencies in each State,
and can also help you find other counseling agencies in your area.
Should I Place My Child for Adoption?
The decision to place a child for adoption is a difficult one.
It is an act of great courage and much love. Remember, adoption is
permanent. The adoptive parents will raise your child and have
legal authority for his or her welfare. You need to think about
these questions as you make your decision.
Have I explored all possibilities?
Pregnancy can affect your feelings and emotions. Are you only
thinking about adoption because you have money problems, or because
your living situation is difficult? These problems might be
temporary. Have you called Social Services to see what they can do,
or asked friends and family if they can help? If you have done
these things and still want adoption, you will feel more content
with your decision.
Will the adoptive parents take good care of my child?
Prospective adoptive parents are carefully screened and give a
great deal of information about themselves. They are visited in
their home several times by a social worker and must provide
personal references. They are taught about the special nature of
adoptive parenting before an adoption takes place. By the time an
agency has approved adoptive parents for placement, they have
gotten to know them very well, and feel confident they would make
good parents. This does not promise that they will be perfect
parents, but usually decent people who really want to care for
children.
Will my child wonder why I placed him (or her) for adoption?
Probably. But adoption in the 1990's is probably a lot different
from what it was when you were growing up. Most adopted adults
realize that their birth parents placed them for adoption out of
love, and because it was the best they knew how to do. Hopefully
your child will come to realize that a lot of his or her wonderful
traits come from you. And if you have an open adoption, it is
likely that you will be able to explain to the child why you chose
adoption.
Why am I placing my child for adoption?
If your answer is because it is what you, or you and your
partner think is best, then it is a good decision. Now it is time
to move forward, and not feel guilty.
What Are the Different Types of Adoption?
There are two types of adoptions, confidential and open.
Confidential: The birth parents and the adoptive parents
never know each other. Adoptive parents are given background
information about you and the birth father that they would need to
help them take care of the child, such as medical information.
Open: The birth parents and the adoptive parents know
something about each other. There are different levels of openness:
- Least open—You will read about several possible
adoptive families and pick the one that sounds best for your
baby. You will not know each other's names.
- More open—You and the possible adoptive family will
speak on the telephone and exchange first names.
- Even more open—You can meet the possible adoptive
family. Your social worker or attorney will arrange the meeting
at the adoption agency or attorney's office.
- Most open—You and the adoptive parents share your full
names, addresses, and telephone numbers. You stay in contact with
the family and your child over the years, by visiting, calling,
or writing each other. Fifteen States have enacted laws that
recognize post-adoption contact between adoptive and birth
families if the parties have voluntarily agreed to this plan.
Talk to your counselor about the type of adoption that is best
for you. Do you want to help decide who adopts your child? Would
you mind if a single person adopted your child, or a couple of a
different race than you? Would you like to be able to share medical
information with your child's family that may only become known in
the future?
If you have strong feelings about these things, work with an
agency or attorney who you feel will listen to what you want.
If you do not have strong feelings about these things, the
adoption agency or attorney will decide who adopts your child based
on who they think can best care for the child.
How Do I Arrange an Adoption Through an Agency?
In all States, you can work with a licensed child placing
(adoption) agency. In all but four States, you can also work
directly with an adopting couple or their attorney without using an
agency.
Private adoption agencies arrange most infant adoptions. To find
private adoption agencies in your area, either contact The
Clearinghouse or look in the yellow pages of your local phone book
under "Adoption Agencies."
There are several types of private adoption agencies. Some are
for profit and some are nonprofit. Some work with prospective
adoptive parents of a particular religious group, though they work
with birth parents of all religions.
When you contact adoption agencies, ask the social workers as
many questions as you need to ask so that you understand the
agencies' rules. Some questions you will want to ask are in the box
below.
| Will I get counseling all through my
pregnancy, after I sign the papers allowing my child to be
adopted, and after my baby is gone?
Can my baby's
father and other people who are important to me join me in
counseling if they want to?
What kind of financial help can I get? What kind of
medical and legal help will I have? Can I get help with medical
and legal expenses?
What will I get to know about the people who adopt my
baby? May I tell you what I think are important traits for
parents to have? How do you know the adoptive parents are good
people? May I meet them if I want, or know their names? Will I
ever be able to have contact with them or my child? Will I ever
know how my child turns out?
What information will you provide to the adoptive parents
about me and my family? |
The agency social worker will ask you questions to find out some
information about you and the baby's father, such as your medical
histories, age, race, physical characteristics, whether you have
been to see a doctor since you became pregnant, whether you have
been pregnant or given birth before, and whether you smoked
cigarettes, took any drugs, or drank any alcohol since you became
pregnant. The social worker asks these questions so that the baby
can be placed with parents who will be fully able to care for and
love the baby, not so that she can turn you down.
How Do I Arrange a Private Adoption?
An adoption arranged without an adoption agency is called an
independent or private adoption. It is legal in all States except
Connecticut, Delaware, Massachusetts, and Minnesota. With a private
adoption, you need to find an attorney to represent you. Look for
an attorney who will not charge you a fee if you decide not to
place your baby for adoption. You also need to find adoptive
parents. Here's how you find both of these.
To Find an Attorney
Legal Aid—This is a service available in most communities
for people who cannot afford a private attorney. Sometimes it is
located at a university law school. NOTE: Some States allow the
adopting parents to pay your legal fees, so going to Legal Aid may
not be necessary.
State Attorney Association or the American Academy of
Adoption Attorneys—These groups can refer you to an attorney
who handles adoptions in your area. Contact the Clearinghouse for
the address and telephone number of your State attorney
association. You can contact the American Academy of Adoption
Attorneys at P.O. Box 33053, Washington, DC 20033-0053.
To Find Adoptive Parents
Personal Ads—Some newspapers carry personal ads from
people seeking to adopt. You call the number in the ad and get to
know each other over the telephone. If you think you want to work
with the couple, have your attorney call their attorney. The
attorneys will work out all the arrangements according to what you
and the adoptive parents want and the laws of your State.
Your Doctor—He or she may know about couples who are
seeking a child, and be able to help arrange the adoption.
Adoptive Parent Support Groups—Parents who have already
adopted may know other people seeking to adopt. You can find out
more about these groups from the Clearinghouse.
National Matching Services—These services help birth
parents and adoptive parents find one another. Contact the
Clearinghouse for more information.
Of course, personal referrals are always good. Ask friends and
family if they know any attorneys or possible adoptive parents.
What If My Baby Is a Child of Color?
There are some special considerations if your baby is a child of
color, such as African American, Hispanic, Native American,
Asian/Pacific Islander or biracial.
If it is important to you that the parents adopting your child
be of the same ethnic or racial background as your child, you will
need to locate an agency or attorney with such families approved
and waiting for placement. You can choose which kind of agency you
work with and which family your child goes to. Ask agencies or
attorneys if they work with families of color and if they have
families of color in their pool of approved families. Many agencies
provide expectant parents with photos and summaries of prospective
adoptive families to help them choose the adoptive family for their
child.
You should be aware that two Federal laws (P.L. 103-382 and P.L.
104-188) prohibit adoption agencies receiving Federal funding from
delaying or denying placement of a child with a prospective
adoptive family in order to achieve racial or ethnic matching.
These laws affect public adoption agencies as well as any private
adoption agencies receiving any Federal funding.
Some agencies may not be as welcoming to you as they could be.
If it is important to you that your child be placed with adoptive
parents where at least one parent is of the same race as your child
and agencies do not have them in their pool of applicants, they may
be concerned that they will not be able to find a family for your
child right away. Not all agencies recruit families of color and
some agencies charge fees that can be prohibitive for many
families.
Some agencies specialize in finding families for children of
color. They work very hard to let people know that children of
color are available for adoption. They also try to make the
adoption process less complicated and intrusive for families.
Contact the Clearinghouse for the names, addresses and telephone
numbers of adoption agencies that specialize in working with
families of color, or for all the adoption agencies in your State.
The information is free.
How Do I Arrange for Future Contact With My
Child If I Want It?
If you decide on a confidential adoption, you may still wish to
make sure that your child can contact you in the future. There are
things you can do now to make that happen.
Many people who are adopted as children later want to meet their
birth parents. With the exception of Alabama, Alaska, Delaware,
Kansas, Oregon, and Tennessee, State laws do not permit them to see
their original birth certificate. Because of these problems, many
States, and some private national organizations, have set up
adoption registries to help people find one another.
A registry works like this: You leave the information about the
birth of the child and your address and telephone number. You must
keep your address and telephone number current. You can register at
any time, even years after the child is born.
When your child is an adult, he or she can call or write this
registry. If what the child knows about his or her birth matches
what the registry has, the registry will release your current
address and telephone number to the child, and you could be
contacted.
There is another way to ensure that your child can contact you
if he or she wishes. Some adoption agencies and attorneys who
arrange private adoptions will hold a letter in their file in which
you say why you chose adoption and how to get in touch with you if
the child ever wants to. If the agency or attorney that you are
working with will not agree to do this, you may wish to work with
somebody else.
There are several national organizations (see box) that offer
ongoing advice and support to birth parents, information about
contact and reunion with their children, and many other things.
People in these organizations have already gone through what you
are going through. They will be very helpful and understanding if
you need someone to talk to. These organizations or the staff of
the Clearinghouse can refer you to a group near you.
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