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Bringing
Home Baby
Increasing
numbers of Americans are finding international adoption to be an
attractive way to build a family. But the children brought home
from Russia, China, and some other parts of the world may have special
medical needs unfamiliar to American doctors. A new clinic led by
a Yale pediatrician is helping ensure that those needs are met.
May
1999
by Mark Alden Branch
On February
12, at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York, John and
Marianna Rivers became parents for the first time.
No, she did not go into labor in the terminal, although the couple
did experience a delivery of sorts. On that day, they waited anxiously
for a seven-month-old Korean baby and his escort to pass through
customs, only to discover that there were seven Korean babies on
board the incoming flight. They had seen photos of baby Jack before,
but on this day he was wearing a hat, which threw them. But John
picked his son out of the lineup, and they left the airport as proud
parents.
Jack Rivers is one of
some 15,000 children from other countries who will be adopted by
Americans this year, as part of an unprecedented boom in international
adoption. The number of such adoptions has risen by 50 percent since
the early 1980s as would-be parents have looked abroad to start
or complete their families. The reason is a mixture of altruism
and self-interest: Some parents are moved by the plight of unwanted
girls in China, where sons are valued more highly and single-child
families are the law; others want to avoid the relationships with
birth parents that sometimes complicate domestic adoptions; still
others are single people who are more likely to be able to adopt
a healthy baby in China or India than in the U.S.
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What
kinds of problems do these children bring along with the
joy they bring their parents?
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But whatever the reason,
international adoption is becoming a familiar part of American life.
And while until recently 70 percent of international adoptees came
from Korea, which has a well-regarded system of foster homes, much
of the new growth in adoptions has come from China, Russia, and
Eastern Europe, where overtaxed orphanages are the rule. What kinds
of problems do these children bring along with the joy they bring
their parents? A new clinic run by a research pediatrician at the
Yale School of Medicine is trying to find out, and to help parents
negotiate solutions.
One of
the first stops for the Rivers family after they brought Jack home
to Norwalk, Connecticut, was the Yale International Adoption Clinic,
a year-old project brought to the University by Dr. Margaret
Hostetter, who came to the School of Medicine last year from
the University of Minnesota to become director of its Child Health
Research Center. Hostetter, whose main field of research is infectious
diseases, founded a similar
clinic, the first of its kind, at Minnesota in 1986.
"One afternoon
I was heading down the hall and was stopped by a colleague,"
recalls Hostetter. "He and his wife were going to adopt a baby
from India, and he had questions about the medical implications.
I said, 'No problem, I'll do a literature search and get back to
you tomorrow.' But there was nothing anywhere about how to evaluate
children adopted internationally."
That dearth of information
led Hostetter and her colleague to the idea of a clinic that would
examine newly adopted children from foreign countries and give them
uniform tests for infectious diseases and other potentially worrisome
conditions. As they collected data, they would analyze and disseminate
the results, helping parents and other physicians learn what diseases
are prevalent among adoptees from various countries. Since Minnesota
then led the nation in international adoption, the clinic found
itself with no shortage of subjects. Hostetter says she has examined
more than 1,400 children over the past 13 years. And as international
adoption has spread, so has the idea of "adoption
medicine": There are now more than a dozen such clinics
around the country, patterned largely after Minnesota's.
Hostetter's findings
have helped to clear the air about some of the medical risks involved
in adopting abroad, a subject that has sometimes received ill-informed,
sensational attention from the media. Her data indicate that such
life-threatening or lifelong problems as HIV, fetal alcohol syndrome,
syphilis, and hepatitis are sometimes seen in adoptees, but that
more common are less serious problems such as intestinal parasites.
Mary-Ellen Warner of Woodbury, Connecticut, says the Yale clinic
discovered that her 22-month-old son Alexander, whom she and her
husband Lee had brought home from a Russian orphanage, was infected
with Giardia, a parasite that is normally contracted in this country
only when beavers get into a water supply. The Warners' own pediatrician,
understandably, had not discovered the problem. (It was cleared
up, and Warner says Alexi is healthy now.)
Even
though some problems tend to be more common in some countries than
others, Hostetter gives every child the same battery of tests.
"There is no problem that is geographically isolated, except
that there seem to be no intestinal parasites in children from Korean
foster homes," she says.
Another common problem
Hostetter has documented is a result of understaffed Russian and
Eastern European orphanages. Many children who have spent time in
those orphanages have significant delays in development, including
fine and gross motor skills, language acquisition, and social and
emotional development. "The longer a child spends in an orphanage,"
she says, "the more likely he or she is to have some developmental
delay." Some children will lose as much as three to four months
of development for every year in an orphanage. Hostetter attributes
these delays -- along with a corresponding delay in linear growth -- to
a lack of regular attention from caregivers. "It doesn't take
much individual attention to avoid these delays," says Hostetter.
"Just half a day a week, as far as we can determine. The caregivers
work six-and-a-half-day weeks, and I saw one case where a caregiver
took a child home with her on Sunday afternoon. That child was just
fine." Similarly, in India, orphanages are staffed by women
known as "ayahs" who on average care for about four children
each. There, too, developmental delays are less common. Whatever
delays may occur as a result of time in an orphanage, the chances
are good that they will be overcome, especially, says Hostetter,
if the child is adopted before the age of 2.
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"The
best way to tell a responsible agency is by how much information
they give you."
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Parents often see an
immediate improvement when the children are brought into an environment
where they receive such increased attention. "There's frequently
a 'magic month' where the children accrue developmental activities
like mad," says Hostetter. "We often ask to see a child
again after that time to see how they're doing when they're fully
acclimated."
Assessing the condition
of newly adopted children is obviously of great benefit, but most
would-be parents would like to know something about a child's health
before they adopt. Medical records from some countries are often
spotty or unreliable, and the less reputable adoption agencies may
minimize or fail to disclose problems that might slow down or block
the adoption. "The best way to tell a responsible agency is
by how much information they give you," says Hostetter. "We've
heard from potential parents who were told by agencies that they
were 'asking too many questions.'"
Still,
some parents are willing to take a chance on a child with a sketchy
medical history. "It's
a risk you take," says Jeff Seymour, who with his wife Barbara
adopted baby Catherine last year from Hangzhou, China. "You've
got to have a little faith and hope it works out. You can't do the
kind of investigation you can in this country."
What
parents can do is ask a doctor like Hostetter to screen videotape
footage of the child for signs of health or developmental problems.
Russian and Eastern European orphanages frequently provide videotapes
of children to
prospective parents, and Hostetter says they can be surprisingly
useful. "If you can see them for five minutes you can get the
gestalt of the child," she says. "You can see if they're
moving all their extremities; you can see gross motor and fine motor
skills, socialization and language. Sometimes there's too much delay
to ascribe to the orphanage -- it may be fetal alcohol syndrome
or another organic cause, especially in Russia and Eastern Europe."
Before they adopted
Alexander, Lee and Mary-Ellen Warner were sent videotapes of two
other Russian children. "We were pretty excited when we got
the video of the first child," says Mary Ellen. "We sent
the video to two doctors. Both were really negative and said there
were a lot of possible problems, including fetal alcohol syndrome.
With the second child, we sent the video and pictures to Dr. Hostetter
and another doctor. Again, they were both very negative and said
there were definitely signs of fetal alcohol syndrome: the thin
upper lip, the eyes far apart. It just broke our hearts." But
when Alexi's tape arrived, Hostetter gave a positive evaluation
of his motor skills and sociability, and the Warners made plans
to go to Russia.
Hostetter says she's
not always comfortable with having such a dramatic role in a child's
future. "When the video shows cause for concern, then the parents
are probably not going to adopt that child," she says. "But
my role is not to say 'don't take this baby.' I lay out the facts
and let them decide if the situation fits their resources."
An experienced
eye can sometimes allay parental fears.
Cristina Benedetto and Rob Laplaca were concerned about the medical
history of the mother of the Korean baby they were considering adopting
last fall. They showed pictures and the medical history to a pediatrician
who came back with an "alarming" report, Benedetto says.
But Hostetter said she didn't think anything was wrong, and the
couple adopted the boy in January.
A week after Laplaca
brought their son William home from Korea, they took him to the
clinic for his evaluation, which confirmed Hostetter's assessment.
William went through a thorough exam given by Hostetter, the developmental
specialist Dr. Carol Cohen Weitzman, and nurse practitioner Betsy
Groth (who is herself the adoptive mother of two Korean girls).
The exam begins with
Groth getting the child's medical history from the parents. She
then discusses with them any concerns they might have -- often,
as with any new parents, they are about sleeping and eating -- and
conducts a physical exam. Then Weitzman, a pediatrician who has
done a fellowship in developmental and behavioral pediatrics, evaluates
the child's development level using standardized assessments. Hostetter
also spends some time with the child before the visit ends with
every parent's (and child's) least favorite part: the drawing of
blood for the extensive battery of tests the clinic performs on
each child. In addition to testing for an array of diseases, the
bloodwork can in some cases verify the accuracy of the foreign vaccination
records that accompany the children.
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"We've
never had an adoption disrupted as a result of medical factors."
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Usually, the children
are fine, and the problems are minor. At Yale, Hostetter has yet
to see any serious health problems, but the numbers are still small
at this clinic -- three or four a week, as opposed to about four
a day in Minnesota. There, she had occasion to tell parents their
children were infected with syphilis, tuberculosis, or hepatitis
B or C. "For the most part, I've found the parents very compassionate
and very understanding," she says. "We've never had an
adoption disrupted as a result of medical factors."
Developmental delays
are more common, but parents are usually able to accept those, too.
Betsy Groth tells of a couple who brought in a Vietnamese girl who
had serious developmental problems. "When we told them about
the situation, they just shrugged and said, 'We're ready to meet
her where she's coming from.' That really made an impression on
me."
It is Groth who, as
an adoptive parent herself, often helps parents grapple with some
of the nonmedical issues they might be facing. "I made a mother
laugh the other day," she says. "She was telling me about
how tired and jet-lagged she was, and I said 'Yeah, and where are
the turkey casseroles?' When you give birth, everyone's ready to
pitch in. But when you bring home an adopted child, people come
over and expect you to serve them snacks!"
Some of the concerns parents want to talk about may have something
to do with a child's past struggles. "We hear from parents
who are concerned that their child is hoarding food," says
Hostetter. "They take food out of the refrigerator and slide
it under the bed. Does this mean the child will be a thief? We assure
them it has nothing to do with the child's moral capacity, but is
just a practical response to the situation they're coming out of."
Some
apparent problems may be the result of cultural differences.
While children from orphanages may be affected by lack of attention,
Korean children sometimes have the opposite problem: They have not
learned to sit up because they've never been put down long enough
to try. "They carry babies all the time over there," says
Cristina Benedetto. "At first, William didn't do a lot for
himself. He didn't hold a bottle or sit up well. But within a week
or two even our big dog couldn't knock him over." (Benedetto
also learned quickly that Korean babies are unaccustomed to sleeping
alone in cribs, having slept on floor mats with their foster parents
in Korea.)
In addition to helping
adoptive parents and children one family at a time, Hostetter, Weitzman,
and Groth hope the data collected at the clinic will lead to improved
care for all internationally adopted children. Already, Hostetter's
published data on the incidence of diseases has proven essential
to the development of recommendations by the American Academy of
Pediatrics as to what tests should be done by pediatricians. "We
hope to put ourselves out of business as the medical profession
gets more familiar with international adoption," says Groth.
"But I don't see that happening for a while."
Weitzman hopes that
when the clinic starts to see a critical mass of patients, she can
begin a research project that will enable the clinic to see the
children again and learn more about their health, growth, and development
over time. "It's not always clear what developmental delay
means," she says. "Some arrive with delays and go on to
do fine, while others have long-term difficulties. We want to learn
what the predictors of healthy adaptation and development are."
Weitzman thinks there
may be differences among children in similar environments that make
some better able to cope with institutional settings (and better
able to adapt to their new homes). "The question is to sort
out which features in these children are protective and which features
heighten the risk of developmental problems," she says. "Those
kinds of questions are applicable to other kinds of environmental
risks; this is an opportunity to study the effect of adverse care."
In the meantime, adoptive
parents like Jeff and Barbara Seymour will continue to seek out
children from abroad, most of them well aware of the potential pitfalls,
but willing to try it anyway in order to build a family. "Every
adoption has risks," says Jeff Seymour. "But the rewards
tend to outweigh them. It's amazing how happy we are."
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