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Building Expertise in Serving Children & Families While KVC started as a small group home for boys, we’ve since learned from research that residential group homecare is not the ideal living situation for most children. We started providing fostercare case management services in Kansas in 1996.
The first is an article written from my research on adoptive parents who placed an intercountry adopted child in out-of-homecare due to the child’s disability. Abstract: Increasingly, intercountry adopted children have special needs similar to children adopted from fostercare in the United States.
Jacque started her career working with developmentally disabled children, youth and adults. Throughout her years with the department, she went on to work with youth in residential facilities, families involved in child welfare, foster parents, and children and youth in fostercare before moving on to supervisory and administrative roles.
During the pandemic, despite risk to themselves, they continued to go out every day to ensure older and disabled people could live safely and well at home, acting as a lifeline for many.”
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