This item was published during the term of a previous administration that ended in April 2007
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Adoption statistics
16/03/2004
Statistics on the number of adoption and freeing order
applications in Scotland in 2003 have been published
today.
The main findings of the National Statistics publication
are:
- There were 373 adoption applications for which an
outcome was reached in 2003. This was four per cent
higher than in 2002 when there were 360 applications.
Over the past twenty years, there has been an overall
decline in the number of adoption applications - there
were almost three times as many adoptions applications
in 1983 as in 2003.
- In 2003, 99 per cent of applications were granted.
Since 1983, at least 95 per cent of adoption
applications have been granted each year, and of the
remainder, the majority were withdrawn, not
refused.
- There were 15 adoptions from overseas, accounting
for 4 per cent of all adoptions in 2003, which was
broadly similar to previous years.
- 80 per cent of adoption applications were for
children aged between one and eleven. The number of
adoption applications for children in all age groups
has declined since 1983, with the biggest decrease
being in adoptions for children under the age of one,
which decreased from 280 in 1983 to 20 in 2003. Since
1997 however, the number of adoptions applications for
children under the age of five has been stable, while
adoptions of children aged 5-17 have continued to
decline.
- The majority of adoption applications for children
under the age of five were made by non-relatives, while
children aged between five and eighteen are more likely
to be adopted by relatives. Most of the decline in
adoptions applications since the mid-1990s can be
explained by a reduction in adoptions by relatives of
the child, e.g., step-parents; adoptions by
non-relatives have remained fairly stable over this
period.
- Adoption agencies identify children in need of
adoption and bring together potential adopters with
those children. They also provide care for children
waiting to be adopted. Just over half of adoption
applications were made through Local Authority adoption
agencies, and almost one in ten were made via voluntary
agencies. The majority of adoptions by non-relatives
were made through agencies. Forty per cent of adoption
applications were made without an agency, which were
mainly applications made by relatives.
- There were 27 adoption applications by
non-relatives, made without an agency. Non-relatives
can apply to adopt without an agency after a child has
lived with them for more than a year, for example
adoptions by long term foster carers.
- The average number of days taken for adoption
applications to reach an outcome decreased from 161 in
1994 to 109 in 1999. Since then, the average number of
days has increased to 140 days in 2003.
- When a child is freed for adoption, birth parents
relinquish their responsibilities to the child and are
not involved in any subsequent adoption proceedings.
The number of applications for the making of freeing
orders reached a peak of 116 in 2000, and has fallen
since then to 98 in 2003. As in previous years, the
majority of these (85) were granted, with 12 being
withdrawn and one being refused. The average age of
children freed for adoption was four years and three
months.
EUROPEAN COMPARISONS
- Over the past five years, between one and four per
cent of adoptions in Scotland were from overseas.
Foreign adoptions in the UK as a whole are slightly
higher (five to six per cent of the total), but they
are much higher in the other EU countries studied, from
34 per cent of adoptions in Germany to 81 per cent of
adoptions in Norway in 2002.
- The number of adoptions per 1,000 children in
Scotland (0.3) is similar to the figure for most of the
countries studied, though Norway and Denmark have
higher figures of 0.9 and 1.0 adoptions per thousand
children, respectively.
- Scotland, Ireland, Norway, Denmark and Germany have
seen declines in the number of children adopted over
the five years to 2002, but England and Wales and the
Netherlands have seen increases of nearly one third of
the same period.
- In most of the selected countries (including
Scotland), there is very little difference in the
number of boys and girls adopted, but in Norway and
Denmark, slightly more girls than boys are adopted. In
both countries, a large proportion of the adoptions are
of girls adopted from China.
Adoption applications are made to the Sheriff Courts in
Scotland and are also considered by the Court of
Session.
There is now a single website providing access to all
regular statistics collected on children in Scotland: the
Scottish
Children's Statistics Gateway.
This is the last time that this data collection will
take place.
Statistics on the overall number of adoptions, including
the gender and age of the child and relationship of
adopters, are available from the General Register Office
(Scotland)
vital event statistics.