Adolescents adopted as infants are twice as likely to have behavioral disorders as those who are not adopted, according to research published Monday that is the deepest analysis yet of the larger mental health burden carried by some adopted children.
Researcher Margaret Keyes, a University of Minnesota psychologist, stressed that adoptive parents or those thinking about adopting shouldn't be alarmed by her study, because rates of emotional problems are relatively low among all adolescents studied, but were higher among adopted kids.
For example, she said that among the 692 adopted kids in the study, 14 percent had attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, compared with 7 percent of the 540 kids in the non-adopted group.
Keyes found similar differences in other mental health conditions that manifest themselves outwardly in destructive or defiant behavior. But she found no significant differences in mental disorders such as anxiety or depression that are more internal.
In a finding that is contrary to what researchers expected, she also found that children adopted from the United States had somewhat higher rates of mental health problems than those who were adopted from other countries.
Adoption experts said that the study documents and quantifies what they have intuitively known for some time.
'A component of loss'
"All adoptions include a component of loss," said Jennifer Wilson, a adoption therapist and trainer for Children's Home Society in St. Paul. "We've learned so much about the impact of that loss" on adopted children, she said.