SAN FRANCISCO — It's hard to grow up in an orphanage – literally. Small stature figures prominently on a growing list of problems that children adopted from abroad are bringing to the United States, according to two adoption specialists.
“More children are being placed in-country,” said Dr. Elaine Schulte, medical director of the International Adoption Program at the Cleveland Clinic Children's Hospital, one of two speakers who outlined current trends in international adoption at the meeting. “Fewer healthy children are available for international adoption, and families are pushed to accept sicker children.”
The number of foreign adoptions to the United States has dropped roughly in half from 2004 to 2009, when it reached 12,753, according to figures from the U.S. Department of State cited by Dr. Schulte. Those children available are more likely to come with serious medical problems. Among the most common are cleft lip and palate, congenital heart disease, Down syndrome, orthopedic problems, amniotic band deformities, and infectious disease such as hepatitis B and C, and HIV.
Only 20% of internationally adopted children have no special medical or developmental issues; in 60%, these problems are mild to moderate and in the rest, severe, Dr. Schulte said.
Even before birth, most of these children suffer from their mother's substance exposures, malnutrition, or stress. After birth, some live through periods of abandonment before being taken into an orphanage.
When they arrive, they often face further malnutrition, abuse, and neglect because even well-intentioned caregivers don't have all the resources the children need, Dr. Schulte said. “These kids don't get talked to,” she said, displaying a photograph of children confined in rows of metal cribs in a barren room. “They lie in bed staring at the ceiling.”
Children coming from foster care generally fare better, but they may have changed homes frequently, leaving them with fear of abandonment.
Families who want to adopt get very little information about the children's backgrounds and health, and are getting even less time than in the past to decide whether to take these children home.
The adoption process itself can lead to health issues. The adopting families may encounter infectious diseases in the general population of the child's country, and they may be infected by the child they are adopting. “I always remind them that they have to take care of themselves,” said Dr. Schulte, the mother of two children adopted from China. “What are you going to do if you get sick, and you have to take care of the child?”
For example, 106 out of 100,000 children adopted from abroad carry hepatitis A, compared with 1 in 100,000 in the general population, she said. So the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention now recommends vaccination for anyone who will have close contact with a child arriving from a country with endemic hepatitis A. She also recommended hepatitis B immunization.
With such precautions in mind, the pediatrician should begin counseling the family before the adoption. A physician can help the family interpret whatever health records are available and formulate more questions. Dr. Schulte gave the example of a child whose photograph suggested fetal alcohol syndrome.
The physician also can prepare the family with community resources, such as a referral to an adoption specialist. (The American Academy of Pediatrics has a directory of such specialists.)
Physicians should schedule their first visits with adopted children a week or two after the children arrive home. Sooner than that, the parents will be too exhausted and will not have had time to closely observe their new children. Dr. Schulte advised allowing at least 30 minutes for the appointment, because it's so important to carefully examine the child and query the parents. The visit can be billed as a 99205 E/M.
The second speaker, Dr. Sarah H. Springer, medical director of the International Adoption Health Services of Western Pennsylvania, recommended a wide range of lab tests, including a CBC, lead level, stool test for ova and parasite (O&P) (3), rapid plasma regain (RPR) or VDRL (Venereal Disease Research Laboratory) tests for syphilis, hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg), hepatitis B surface antibody (HbsAb), hepatitis B core antibody (HbcAb), hepatitis C virus (HCV), HIV-1 and HIV-2, a tuberculin skin test (PPD), or an interferon gamma release assay (IGRA) test if the child is older than 5 years of age. These should be rechecked after 6 months, because some diseases take that long to seroconvert.
Whatever immunization records the child brings are unlikely to meet the AAP and CDC standards. “You can't take anything you get from another country at face value,” said Dr. Springer, also of Kids Plus Pediatrics at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center. One increasingly common exception is immunizations supervised by the U.S. State Department. Even if records do meet standards, you should check titers.