After you adopt a child, can the birth parents take them back?
It's a fear that any new parent can understand: what if the child gets taken away? Every child is unique and special, so when you have the chance to adopt them, it's natural to worry that their birth parents might change their minds and want them back. The answer is typically no - but it does matter what state you are in - there is also a difference between a temporary placement of a child and a final decree of adoption.
(1) For starters, it's important to know that this possibility is rare. "In most cases, when a child is adopted by a family, that child will remain with the family," says Dave Wilton of the National Council For Adoption. "So the notion of taking the child back from the family is actually quite rare."
(2) In fact, according to statistics from the North American Council on Adoptable Children, less than one percent of adoptions in the U.S. were disrupted between 2004 and 2009.
When a child is adopted and there is a permanent finalized decree of adoption, the record is sealed (at least in Utah it is) and whenever the adoption is finalized, the child's original birth certificate is no longer valid and a new one is issued. Then it is highly unlikely that birth parents would ever be able to take that child back.
Ascent Law LLC
8833 S Redwood Rd Ste C
West Jordan UT 84088
(801) 676-5506
https://www.ascentlawfirm.com/adoption-process-in-utah/
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