Adoption screening can be a method that takes into account numerous elements in determining the suitability of a child and would-be parent. It’s generally used to ascertain that the prospective parent has the means, financial and otherwise, to make the adoption a successful one. Adoption screening could be complicated, though perhaps unfortunately it is often a mere formality in many parts of the world, including even North America, Australia, New Zealand, and also the European Union.
One of the most complex tasks of the overall adoption screening process involves a home study. This is when the home life of a prospective father or mother is scrutinized to make sure that the home environment will benefit the child to be adopted. As can be imagined, such a thorough vetting can cost a lot of money, usually borne by the future parent.
Various laws, agency regulations, and industry standards may govern a home study, but generally speaking all such investigations will look into the employment history of the prospective parent, whether there’s a criminal record, and so forth. Credit checks will most likely be involved, as personal finances would be one of the most important areas subject to an examination. As the name most immediately implies, however, a home study will carefully consider the dwelling of a potential parent, with such aspects as cleanliness, fire safety, and even the condition of the surrounding neighborhood taken into account.
Naturally, given such levels of scrutiny, many criticize home studies for being uselessly intrusive and discriminatory, claiming that many otherwise perfectly capable and genuinely loving would-be adoptive parents are turned away on nothing more than whimsy and technicalities.
But such is the concern for child welfare in one of the most advanced societies that home studies are legally mandated and thus inevitable. And for all the criticism, it is arguable that a slow, even difficult, adoption process better helps ensure that only the truly committed will adopt.
