Detailed description
Foster families are entitled to support and advice before and during the placement of a foster child. This also applies in cases where the foster child is not provided with any educational or integration assistance and in cases where the foster carer does not require permission for full-time care (up to the third degree of kinship).
The tasks and requirements for foster families with a youth welfare mandate differ significantly from those of a family without a youth welfare mandate. As private individuals, you are carrying out a public mandate within the framework of child-rearing assistance. You are thereby obliged to cooperate within the framework of the assistance planning and the care agreement concluded between you and the foster care service.
In temporary full-time care, the foster child lives with the foster family for a certain period of time with the clear prospect of the child returning to his or her birth family. The responsible youth welfare office assesses the development opportunities of the birth parents in such a way that a return of the foster child is possible within a certain period of time.
In order to successfully meet the requirements of a foster family in the long term, you need professional support from specialists with proven expertise in the field of foster care. Continuous specialist support and advice on foster care relationships helps to stabilize them in the long term and is therefore an important contribution to ensuring the well-being of the child.