Grandparents, other relatives, or other caregiving adults sometimes assume parental responsibilities when a child’s actual parent(s) is absent, often helping such children cope successfully. But the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry cautions that “Many children living with grandparents arrive with preexisting problems or risk factors including abuse, neglect, prenatal exposure to drugs and alcohol, and loss of parents (death, abandonment and incarceration). This situation can create risks for both children and grandparents.”7
Grandparents, other relatives, or other caregiving adults sometimes assume parental responsibilities when a child’s actual parent(s) is absent, often helping such children cope successfully. But the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry cautions that “Many children living with grandparents arrive with preexisting problems or risk factors including abuse, neglect, prenatal exposure to drugs and alcohol, and loss of parents (death, abandonment and incarceration). This situation can create risks for both children and grandparents.”7
การแปล กรุณารอสักครู่..
