African American Adoptions Online

Building African American Families Through Internet Adoptions

OPEN ADOPTION:
THE CHOICE OF A LIFETIME

With infertility on the rise, more childless African American couples are turning to the Internet for adoption to build their families.

A growing number of families and infertile couples are turning on their computers and clicking onto the Internet to find qualified resources to help them adopt. The privacy to be able to research and read about adoption in their own homes and the ease of use are allowing prospective families to work with organizations across the country and around the world. Thousands of prospective adoptive families have been able to safely adopt with resources found on the Internet.

Verifying the track record and success rate of an organization is easily done. Families can check with the Better Business Bureau for a company's background and complaint record. Always ask for references and visit a number of sites first before choosing to work with a company.

Around 1996, adoption organizations began putting up websites to help families come together. Now there are web sites like this one with several pages of information on adoption. Our sister site, Lifetime Adoption, has profiles of over 75 families, including African American couples wanting to adopt, and an average of 85 birth mothers choosing adoption, many who are seeking African American families.

Birth parents can read about the lifestyle of a prospective family and view their photos before speaking to them on the phone. It is not uncommon for a birth mother seeking a family to mail or call us and have found three families she is interested in speaking to from our website.
by Mardie Caldwell

Adoptive families and birth parents today have many choices with open or semi-open adoption.

For the adoptive family, there is the comfort of knowing the family medical history for your child and their genealogy. And when those inevitable questions about heritage arise, parents can comfortably and openly tell them about who they are and share from the heart to comfort their child. Your child will know he or she was loved because of a loving choice their birth parent made, an important fact you can share with them.

Birth parents have the opportunity to select the family that will parent, nurture and guide their child through life. Not only can birth mothers and fathers meet the family, many develop close personal bonds prior to the birth. Some birth parents and grandparents even have an option to remain in contact after the birth through photographs and letters. Still others may request an occasional meeting.

Open adoption can be a wonderful and fulfilling experience where everyone wins - especially the child.

As an adoptive mother and an adoption professional, I have seen a variety of scenarios that work out beautifully with open adoption.

 

Open and Semi-Open Adoption Situations:
  • Exchange of letters and photos only - number of times a year pre-agreed upon.
  • Exchange of letters and photos, through a non-family, 3rd party administrator.
  • Adoptive family website where photos of their child are posted for birth mother viewing.
  • Letters, photos and occasional visits, which can take place at a park or restaurant or in the family's home, as agreed upon.
  • Extended family scenario, where the birth mother is included as a family member at holidays and other special occasions.
  • No contact until 18 years of age.

Whatever level of openness is agreed upon, the choice is yours.

 

The one family type that is always in short supply is the African American family. Black families interested in African American newborns are normally matched with a birth mother within a few months. Christian and Catholic, African American families are also requested by birthmothers.

Statistics show that in the United States there are over 500 thousand children in foster care; a majority of them are African American or African American mixed children. One hundred thousand are waiting to be adopted. With the Internet and sites like Lifetime Adoption it is taking less than 14 months for most couples to adopt, and less for African American families.

"Many calls come in on our 24 hour hotline," states a coordinator at Lifetime."A birth mother wants to have her baby adopted immediately from the hospital to avoid foster care altogether. When we receive that phone call in the middle of the night, we are able to tell the birth mother about adoptive families and then call a family immediately." Once the birth mother chooses a family, they can meet at the hospital and the baby goes home with the adoptive family. Although not all adoptions happen this way, many do. All legal expenses are paid for by the adopting couple so there are no expenses to the birth families. Since the adoption is private the process is much more confidential, allowing the birth mother the freedom to share her plans only with whom she wishes. Adoptive families should be aware they also need a home study and legal representation to complete their adoption.

Lifetime states that birth parents range in age from 13 to 40 years old. Most of their clients are in the 20's and 30's range and many are requesting families of a particular faith. Some have children already and for others this is their first pregnancy. Women can find help on the Internet by accessing web sites from their library or friend's computers if they don't have their own, although many birth parents do have access to the Internet now. "We also have referrals from pastors and priests all over the nation, seeking assistance for members of their congregation who have found themselves or their daughters with unplanned pregnancies," states Lifetime.  

Birth mothers must provide proof of pregnancy and are given resources to help them with their decision. Counseling is offered to women considering adoption. Since birth parents are located all over the nation, they are offered counseling in their hometown. Often for privacy or when they are in a rural area, the option of phone counseling instead of coming into a counseling office is provided.

For more information about adopting a child or placing one for adoption, please contact us, or visit Lifetime Adoption.

African American Adoptions Online, #1 in black and biracial adoptions across the country.
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