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STEP-BY-STEP PROCEDURES FOR
ADOPTION |
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- For information on
adoption, approach any child welfare agency or a
voluntary coordinating agency in your area. (List
in Annexure 5).
- Get all the
information that you need, clarify your doubts
and then register with one agency with whom you
feel most comfortable. Please do not register
with several agencies in the hope of getting a
"better" choice or a faster placement.
The agencies have their own networking system
whereby they co-ordinate with each other to
locate a suitable child for you. If you register
with more than one, this results in unnecessary
duplication of work, both for you and for the
agency.
- Study the documents
that you need to complete as part of the
formalities in the process of adoption. (List in
Annexure 2).
- The social worker
will set up appointments with you at a mutually
convenient date and time for: single interviews;
joint interviews; and a Home Visit. This is part
of the Home Study preparation and pre-adoption
counselling.
- Use these meetings
with the social worker to clarify all your
apprehensions and to discuss freely your
expectations.
- Then wait patiently.
This is the most difficult part of the process,
because once you have made a decision to adopt,
you would like it to be completed with utmost
haste. But please remember that all efforts will
be made by the agency to locate a suitable and
compatible child for you and this may take time -
anything from three to six months, depending on
the availability of children. It would be an
appropriate analogy to draw here that just as
nature has provided time between conception and
the birth of a baby, so the adoption process
involves this period of waiting which allows a
couple to get emotionally prepared for adoptive
parenthood.
- Meeting your child:
This is the moment you have been waiting for with
mixed feelings of excitement and anxiety. The
social worker will arrange for you to see the
child that has been identified for you.
- The medical screen:
once you feel you would like to adopt the child,
it is important to get a complete re-examination
done with a doctor of your choice to reassure
yourself of the childs health.
- When your decision is
final, you have to meet a lawyer who will help
you file all the relevant papers in court before
you can take the child home in pre-adoptive
foster care.
- Court Hearing and
legalisation process: The social worker will
assist you with all legal formalities and you may
be required to attend court.
- Documents related to
the adoption will be given to you by your lawyer:
the court decree, the Deed of Adoption (if
relevant) and the childs birth affidavit
(Annexure 6).
- Post-adoption
Follow-up: The social worker will keep in touch
with you and visit you for follow-ups as per the
stipulation of the court and the agencys
rules ( Annexure 4). Even after the legal
follow-up period is over, you can feel free to
approach the agency for any advice or assistance.
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