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Choosing Your Adoption Professionals:
Adoption Practitioners Along with your licensee, your adoption practitioner will probably be your most important source of information, advice and support during the adoption process. S/he's one of the first people you'll speak to and one of the last. If adoption is a learning process and a lifelong journey, think of him/her as your teacher and your guide. His/her main job will be to help you through the home study process and prepare you for the challenges that lie ahead. S/he'll also go over the prospective birth parents' social and medical histories with you, which are their version of the home study. And finally, after the placement, s/he'll be responsible for visiting you at your home and completing a report on how you're adjusting to your new life as parents. While adoption practitioners lack the legal experience
of an adoption licensee, they're an excellent sounding board on just about
everything else and can help you sort through your feelings -- and usually
for a fraction of the cost.
Before you hire anyone, have a conversation. Find
out:
Make sure that you can talk to her/him easily and openly. After all, you'll be confiding a lot of personal details -- things about your life that you may not have shared with anyone else, not even members of your own family,.
Your adoption practitioner will know the adoption process inside out. But remember, you're the one who's going through it. Don't rely on him/her too heavily when it comes to filling out forms and meeting deadlines. In order for your case to be a priority for him/her, you have to make it a priority for you. Adoptive Parents | Birth Parents | Adopting in Canada | Waiting Parents Registry | Our Services | Discuss Adoption Contact Us: info@canadaadopts.com |
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