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Placement disruption and related factors are an ever-present and increasing concern for foster care systems. The majority of children who are in foster care in the United States for 24 months or longer experience three or more placements, with children with special needs experiencing an average of four or more placements (Leathers et al., 2019; Platt & Gephart, 2022; Skoog et al., 2015). The impact of these frequent placement disruptions and subsequent moves is significant. Children experience considerable loss across domains including friends, siblings, and contact with other family members, and they must adapt to new families, neighborhoods, and schools (Fawley-King et al., 2017). Placement disruptions have been found to relate to significant adverse effects on children's emotional, behavioral, relational, developmental, and academic functioning as a result (Konijn et al., 2019; Oosterman et al., 2007; Vreeland et al., 2020). In addition, placement disruptions also present human and financial costs to foster families and associated professionals and organizations (Taylor & McQuillan,2014). This study aims to further explore factors associated with the significant problem of placement disruption to...





