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March 2012Vol. 13, No. 2Teens in Care At Risk of Becoming Pregnant

Teens in foster care face varying challenges throughout their lives, many of which may put them at a higher risk for becoming a teen parent. Child Trends recently published a research brief, Teen Parents in Foster Care: Risk Factors and Outcomes for Teens and Their Children, which examines research on teens in foster care and assesses the extent to which they are at risk for teen pregnancy and parenting. Current research shows that teen pregnancy rates are higher in teens who are in foster care than their peers without foster care experience.

Certain risk factors have been identified as influencing susceptibility to teen pregnancy. Teens in foster care tend to experience these risk factors more than their peers. The risk factors include family structure, turbulence in the family environment, socioeconomic status, exposure to abuse or neglect, educational performance, behavioral problems, and sexual risk taking. The brief also discusses the challenges to caseworkers, foster parents, and policymakers in reducing the rate of pregnancy among teens in foster care, including:

  • Difficulty in discussing teen sexual activity and relationships
  • Disruptions in placements
  • Heavy caseloads for workers
  • Lack of consensus about who should provide sex education
  • Limited outreach to teen males

Child Trends hopes the brief will increase understanding of this high-risk population, the factors that put them at risk, challenges to helping this population, and areas for research.

The research brief, Teen Parents in Foster Care: Risk Factors and Outcomes for Teens and Their Children, by Jennifer Manlove, Kate Welti, Marci McCoy-Roth, Amanda Berger, and Karin Malm, was supported by the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation. It is available on the Child Trends website:

http://www.childtrends.org/Files/Child_Trends-2011_11_01_RB_TeenParentsFC.pdf (998 KB)