About

This is is the blog of Dr. Ron Federici, child therapist and specialist in international adoptions. Dr. Federici has helped many children adopted from orphanages in Romania and Russia. Angelina Jolie has retained Dr. Federici as her adoption consultant.

3 Comments Add your own

  • 1. knowledgetoday  |  March 30, 2009 at 4:06 pm

    I love your site. Keep it up !

    Reply
  • 2. Dr Ronald Federici  |  April 13, 2010 at 2:03 pm

    It is people like untrained/unlicensed Monica Pignotti,
    Charly Miller ( who lost her license; was said to be drunk on the job, and was in court for violations of ethics), and Jean Mercer
    ( unlicensed research psychologist) who have NO CLUE how to handle and manage patients. They run around talking like experts in child psychology, when NOT ONE OF THEM have ever seen a patient or treated a violent, out of control child.

    They make up all kinds of posts on the web; call me an “attachemnt therapists” when I am a Board Certified Developmental Neuropsychologist and have NOTHING to do with all that RAD treatment. They are misinformed, poorly trained, and involve themselves with fringe advocacy groups. Pignotti is trying to find a place for herself, but needs a residency, fellowship and actual training in patient care.

    The proper and safe restraint methods I have outline in my works have been utilized in most all state hospitals, juvenile justice systems, clinics, and emergency rooms. Charly Miller is a clueless writer with NO credentials.

    If I was doing something wrong, my State Licensing Board would know and sanction me. Instead, they are supportive of all my work and contributions, and basically ignore all this odd internet critics.

    Reply
  • 3. Dr Ronald Federici  |  April 13, 2010 at 5:51 pm

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    Senate Testimony of Dr. Ronald Federici
    by Child Services Notebook Saturday, Jan. 09, 2010 at 9:17 AM

    My name is Dr. Ronald Federici. I am a developmental neuropsychologist, which basically means I specialize in evaluating children with neurodevelopmental and psychiatric difficulties. I am Professor of Pediatrics and Neuropsychology and Child Development. I lecture extensively throughout the United States and internationally. And I am also an honorary member of the remaining Department of Child Welfare, because my medical team works extensively in Romania, working on the institution projects.

    STATEMENT OF RONALD S. FEDERICI, PSY.D., CLINICAL DIRECTOR,
    PSYCHIATRIC AND NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOCIATES, P.C.,
    ALEXANDRIA, VIRGINIA

    Dr. Federici. Mr. Chairman, Senator Landrieu, it is a
    pleasure to be here. Committee members, thank you very much for
    allowing me the opportunity to testify.
    My name is Dr. Ronald Federici. I am a developmental
    neuropsychologist, which basically means I specialize in
    evaluating children with neurodevelopmental and psychiatric
    difficulties. I am Professor of Pediatrics and Neuropsychology
    and Child Development. I lecture extensively throughout the
    United States and internationally. And I am also an honorary
    member of the remaining Department of Child Welfare, because my
    medical team works extensively in Romania, working on the
    institution projects.
    I am also very proud to be the adoptive parent of four
    internationally adopted children, and have recently gained
    guardianship with two other children in Romania.
    My professional colleagues in international adoption
    medicine have basically designated me as the one who has seen
    the most difficult children. My estimate is that I have seen
    over 1,500 to 1,600 internationally adopted children who are in
    their school age years for various evaluations for neurological
    or psychiatric difficulties.
    Basically, I am speaking to the committee on behalf of my
    work and research, which I am also going to offer to the
    committee, as well as some other supportive documentation. And
    I am very proud to have many of the families and support groups
    here in the audience who I have worked alongside for many, many
    years, who would corroborate some of the difficulties that have
    surfaced regarding international adoptions and adoption
    practices.
    While I am not an attorney, my job is to be an investigator
    and work with the families to help them provide the most
    detailed assessment of their child’s special needs, and also to
    help develop the most appropriate treatment plans to bring the
    child to their maximum potential.
    If I may just say that I have probably, in my research
    sample, and it is included in my testimony which the committee
    has already, we are organizing a very detailed research sample,
    in conjunction with Dr. Dana Johnson and the University of
    Minnesota, and Dr. Pat Mason, of Emory University, which should
    solidify all the data on the long-term effects of
    institutionalization regarding thousands of cases.
    In my one sample, which I have seen, which has been
    reported, of over 1,500 internationally adopted children, every
    one of them were informed by their adoption agency that they
    were healthy. All 1,500 of them were not healthy.
    I broke down the statistics in terms of by numbers. But if
    we were to look at approximations, 50 to 60 percent of the
    children had long-term chronic problems; 20 to 30 percent had
    refractory or chronic difficulties that would require lifelong
    care and probably a lack of independence on the part of the
    child; and less than 20 percent of our sample, which is
    corroborated now with an additional sample that I have provided
    from Emory University, since they have also done recent data
    collections, show that the children were able to be resilient.
    Again, sir, all of the children were advised by their
    agencies that they were healthy. The statements that were made
    consistently to me from the families, since I have had the
    opportunity to review a modicum of medical records, that to
    disregard the medical records, the children will be fine, they
    are slightly delayed, they need a loving home, they need care,
    health, hygiene, and everything would be fine.
    This turned out to be absolutely incorrect, at least in our
    assessment now of the older children, since what we are finding
    out about the long-term effects of institutionalization, from
    nutritional, medical and psychological neglect, which I have
    supplied some of the most up-to-date research from researchers
    across the country who would corroborate the findings, is that
    children from internationally adopted settings, regardless of
    age, are deemed a very high-risk population and require very
    special families to handle these cases.
    In my work with Romanian Secretary of State Tabacaru, he
    recommends that every child out of Romania receive a label as a
    handicapped child or a child at risk for delays.
    Some of the other critical issues that seem to come about
    is that the families were grossly ill prepared, overwhelmed. I
    have dealt with families who divorced, went bankrupt. Many
    relinquished their children. The majority of the families were
    in states of despair and depression, where they did not know
    how to deal with the situation of a, quote, healthy child.
    All families passed the home study. In my years, 20 years
    of practice, I have yet to see a family fail a home study.
    Several of the families that passed home studies were active
    alcoholics, drug addicts, out of prison, financially ill
    prepared, unemployed, and so forth and so on, where they were
    clearly not afforded a proper home study or psychological
    evaluation, which has, for the most part, been deleted as a
    critical part of the home study.
    I have now been called upon to be a participant in numerous
    litigations against agencies. I have served as an expert
    witness several times, and right now I am involved in eight
    different litigations against 10 different agencies.
    So, in summary, sir, there seems to be quality control over
    the preparation for the families. The families are very ill
    prepared. There seems to be some misinformation provided to the
    1,500 families who had, quote, healthy children, when all were
    impaired at some level, with many of the families wondering why
    they would pay so much money for a handicapped child.
    Thank you very much for allowing me the opportunity to
    testify.
    [The prepared statement of Dr. Federici follows:]

    Prepared Statement of Dr. Federici

    I, Dr. Ronald Steven Federici, am a Board Certified Developmental
    Neuropsychologist and expert in severely delayed children, particularly
    children from post-institutionalized settings. I have been in
    professional practice for 20 years and have evaluated approximately
    1800 adopted and internationally adopted children. I am regarded as the
    Country’s expert in the neuropsychological evaluation and treatment of
    the post-institutionalized child and lecture nationally and
    internationally on this topic. I am the author of “Help for the
    Hopeless Child: A Guide for Families (With Special Discussion for
    Assessing and Treating the Post-Institutionalized Child)”. Also, I am
    the parent of six internationally adopted children; four of which
    reside with us in the United States and the other two I raise in their
    home country of Romania in which I maintain legal guardianship.
    I have been evaluating internationally adopted children since
    early-mid 1980′s to present. I have evaluated approximately 1800 post-
    institutionalized children and have collected extensive data which is
    now being reviewed and incorporated into a major research project with
    Dr. Dana Johnson at the University of Minnesota and Dr. Patrick Mason
    at Emory University. My preliminary data is referenced in my book and
    will be further outlined in my summary testimony.
    Families come to see me from all over the United States and now
    England and Ireland in order to receive my expertise in developmental
    neuropsychological evaluations. Virtually every family who has come to
    see me was informed by their adoption agency that their child was
    either “healthy” or had “mild developmental delays which would
    improve with a loving and nurturing family”. I have reviewed thousands
    of medical and psychiatric records on these post-institutionalized
    children and have also heard thousands of the exact same story from
    families who have adopted regarding their experience with their
    international adoption agency.
    There is a very important point to be made here regarding the
    entire international adoption process, even prior to the child being
    placed. In my 20 years of practice and, most recently, the extensive
    work with internationally adopted children, I have yet to see a family
    fail a “home study” which was provided by the agency. For example, I
    have a family in which both parents were active alcoholics and in
    treatment, but were allowed to adopt two children. When I confronted
    them how they passed the home study, they openly informed me that their
    adoption agency told them “we just won’t put that in the home study”.
    I have many other cases in which it was clear one parent was mentally
    ill, or both had significant emotional and marital problems but yet
    passed the home study. I even have one case in which the father was out
    of jail for sexual offenses and passed the home study in order to adopt
    a child from Russia. Therefore, what is the purpose of a home study if
    it does not measure or adequately assess any psychological domains of
    the perspective parents or the agency will go as far as omitting
    important information.
    Specifically, all of the families who have come to see me have felt
    at the end of their patience and totally overwhelmed and frustrated. By
    the time families make it to my office, they have seen multiple medical
    and psychiatric providers who still have not been able to reach a
    conclusion or consensus regarding the type of illness or damage to
    their child. The families have consistently told me that they have
    brought their concerns to their international adoption agency, but have
    rarely–if ever–received any type of support, encouragement or even
    proper referral to those of us who are designated experts in
    international adoption medicine. Actually, many of the families were
    told to avoid specialists such as myself or others across the country
    as “we would only find a problem with their child which was not true
    as the child just needed more time and love to adjust”.
    Most families sought out my services as well as specialty services
    from other international adoption specialists through the Parent
    Network for the Post-Institutionalized Child (PNPIC), Friends of
    Russian and Ukranian Adoptions (FRUA), word of mouth or by reading
    various articles I have published or my recently published book.
    Additionally, families with damaged internationally adopted children
    flock to conferences sponsored by the Parent Network which have now
    totaled over 17 across the United States and in the United Kingdom. In
    these conferences which I have co-sponsored and lectured, rarely do we
    see international adoption agency personnel. Actually, agencies avoid
    these conferences and avoid dealing directly with the significant
    problems that many post-institutionalized children experience.
    In my preliminary research statistics, based on a sample of 1500
    internationally adopted, post-institutionalized children, with an
    average age of 4.2 years and an average time in the institution from
    24-through-84 months, of the adoption agencies informed the families
    that the children were “healthy or only mildly delayed which would
    improve with a loving family”. The medical records clearly indicated
    that the child showed high risk pre- and post-natal factors such as
    fetal alcohol exposure, prematurity, nutritional neglect, low birth
    weight, or just the damaging effects of living in a deprived
    institution. Also, there are frequently uncertain “medical diagnoses”
    put on the child’s records such as perinatal encephalopathy, hypoxia or
    various other unusual terms. While the medical experts consistently
    state that these Eastern European diagnoses might not mean anything,
    caution is still provided to the parents. International adoption
    agencies frequently tell the parents to “disregard the medical records
    from the country as they have to put something down in order for the
    child to be adopted out”. We are now finding that many of the true
    medical records may lack clarity or sophistication in diagnostic
    nomenclature, but are in fact correct in defining a child who is at
    high risk or ill at some level.
    The neuropsychological outcome factors of these 1500 children
    yields the following:

    1. 450 or approximately 30% of the sample had severe
    neuropsychiatric disorders such as mental retardation, autism,
    fetal alcohol syndrome, or chronic and long-term disabilities.
    2. 750 or approximately 50% of the sample displayed mild-to-
    moderate learning disabilities and developmental disorders
    which required life-long special education, medical and
    psychiatric interventions.
    3. 375 or approximately 20% of the sample displayed
    relatively “clean” or benign neuropsychological and
    psychological difficulties which would continue to improve over
    the course of time and with the appropriate medical,
    psychological and educational interventions along with routine
    acculturation.

    Therefore, 80% of the children I have evaluated whose families were
    told by their agency that they were “healthy” were, in fact
    neuropsychiatrically impaired and would pose a financial and emotional
    burden to the family for life. I fully realize that families come to me
    for evaluation of problems, but if one provider such as myself has seen
    so many impaired internationally adopted children, there must be
    definite problems in the entire international adoption process
    beginning at the time of the child being identified in their home
    country (grossly inaccurate medical and psychiatric assessments).
    Additionally, it is absolutely inappropriate for international adoption
    agencies to tell families who are adopting children from such high risk
    countries such as Russia, Romania, Bulgaria, other Eastern European
    countries, India as well as Central and South America is that “all
    children need is a loving and stable home and time to adjust”.
    Many of the agencies have recently published their “research and
    surveys” regarding internationally adopted children. In the most
    recent one completed by a Washington, D.C. agency, they touted that
    only “less than 10% of the children had problems and that most were
    doing well”. Professional researchers and critics have totally
    disregarded these surveys as they are no more than “content surveys”.
    Most families are happy they have a child which is the target of these
    surveys, but there is no real mention or assessment regarding the level
    of disabilities. Emory University International Child Clinic and the
    Parent Network for the Post-Institutionalized Child are now conducting
    a more professional national survey and finding completely contrary
    results from the Washington, D.C. based survey. It is very clear that
    proper professional evaluation of the internationally adopted child
    indicates that these children are a “very high risk population”. Just
    for the Senate hearing records, I offered a modicum of professional
    input and proper neurological and psychiatric assessment surveys to the
    Washington, D.C. adoption agency who published the recent “contentment
    survey” that I am sure the agencies will discuss. I spent ample time
    in helping them formulate a proper research survey, but was informed by
    the Director (following a presentation regarding neuropsychological
    work with post-institutionalized children) that if “she were to tell
    families everything that I have presented or given to their agency,
    that no one would adopt”. This sums up the issue and clearly shows
    that financial gain and increasing adoption numbers took priority over
    quality assurance and protection of the perspective adoptive family.
    The agencies maintain a “wait and see philosophy” and have rarely
    recommended to my families immediate and aggressive evaluation and
    treatment. Even when families take my neuropsychological or other
    medical data back to the agency in an effort to point out that their
    child is severely impaired or delayed, many agencies which I can
    specifically name and identify, have told families to disregard my
    evaluation and keep getting additional opinions with the hope of
    finding the child healthy and discredit my findings or those of my
    professional colleagues. It should be emphasized that by the time
    families come to me, I am, in fact, the last opinion or the one they
    count on the most based on my expertise and extensive experience with
    the post-institutionalized child.
    I am an Honorary member of the Romanian Department of Child
    Protective Services and President of the Romanian Challenge Appeal
    which is an international humanitarian aid organization. I have over 30
    medical specialists from all disciplines who have worked in Romania
    evaluating children in institutional settings. I have visited
    institutions all over the world, particularly Romania, and it is very
    clear that any child residing in such a deprived environment can and
    must be labeled “high risk” due to the multitude of environmental,
    medical, nutritional and deprivation risk factors which international
    adoption agencies grossly minimize when the families are in the initial
    stages of international adoption.
    A vast amount of my families have informed me that, when they went
    to the country to pick up the child, it was very clear that the child
    was sick and no where near the “statement of health” provided by the
    international adoption agency. Many families have also informed me that
    their child was switched at the last minute, or that their child was so
    sick that they doubted he or she would make it home. Furthermore, many
    of the families who adopted older children found the child to be
    completely out of control and were completely ill-prepared to deal with
    a violent and out of control child for the trip home.
    I have served as expert witness on several high profile cases such
    as the murder ease in Colorado where the mother murdered her
    internationally adopted toddler (Polreis case) in addition to the Thorn
    case where the parents were arrested in New York for allegedly abusing
    their two Russian toddlers who were out of control on the plane. I have
    been asked to serve as an expert witness multiple times by families
    filing suit against their international adoption agencies. In the cases
    I have participated in, international adoption agencies withheld or
    fabricated records, blatantly lied to the families regarding the health
    status of the child, or were involved in some type of scandal between
    the U.S. agency and the overseas NGO. I have personally witnessed
    lawyers obtaining the true medical records on the children in which the
    international adoption agency and NGO deliberately withheld. I have
    seen cases settle for millions of dollars. I have seen families being
    given a child who has Delta-D Hepatitis which is a terminal condition
    when they were told the child was perfectly healthy and passed the
    “exit medical examination” in their home country in which the
    hepatitis would have been picked up immediately if it were a legitimate
    examination. In many of the cases, it was exceedingly clear that the
    agency withheld valuable information from the families which would have
    potentially changed their decision to adopt or prepare properly for
    adopting a special needs child.
    I have seen a multitude of families disrupt their adoption because
    they were no longer able to care for the child’s financial and
    emotional needs. I have seen families separate and divorce, or engage
    in abuse of their child because the child exhibited grossly out of
    control and aggressive behaviors. I have evaluated children who have
    severe attachment disorders, neuropsychiatric conditions, sexual
    offenders, killers of animals within the home, and several children who
    have attempted to murder their siblings, parents or commit suicide. I
    have consistently watched families feel devastated and enraged with
    their international adoption agency who had promised them a “healthy
    child”.
    There are few, if any, international adoption agencies who have
    provided adequate training for the high risk factors of the post-
    institutionalized child. Follow up counseling or support from
    international adoption agencies is virtually non-existent.
    It has been my professional and personal experience that, when
    confronted, international adoption agencies maintain strong denial,
    deceit and manipulation when they are forced to deal with a family that
    has a damaged child. This is not an isolated occurrence, but a
    situation which has occurred thousands of times. I urge the Committee
    to consult with the Parent Network for the Post-Institutionalized Child
    (Thais Tepper and Lois Hannon, Directors), in addition to various other
    support groups around the country for families with internationally
    adopted children. It would also be worthwhile for the Committee to
    review the statistics of Tressler Lutheran Services in Pennsylvania as
    directed by Barbara Holtan. This program has handled many disrupted
    international adoptions and specialized in placing these very difficult
    children.
    In summary, and as stated in my book, international adoption
    agencies do a very poor job in preparing families for the high-risk
    post-institutionalized child. They maintain a position of denial and
    minimization regarding the damaging effects of institutional care and
    sell families the fantasy that a “good loving home and time will cure
    all”. Yes, there are definitely many children who do well, but there
    is a very large percentage of families with damaged children. If I,
    myself, have seen nearly 2000 and the Parent Network for the Post-
    Institutionalized Child has almost 6000 families having damaged
    children, and other organizations having thousands of their own damaged
    children and families, then there clearly is a need for better quality
    control on the part of the international adoption agencies.
    Furthermore, all of the families who have come to me have spent a
    minimum of $15,000-$20,000 to adopt their child which turned out to be
    special needs. As stated by the Romanian Secretary of State, Dr.
    Cristian Tabacarn, a Romanian adoption should cost no more than $4,000-
    $5,000. Families are instructed to carry over large volumes of cash in
    “new bills” by their adoption agency to hand to the overseas
    coordinator. This statement I can verify personally as I am the parent
    of six internationally adopted children and was instructed by my agency
    to carry over large sums of money in new bills and with specific
    denominations. There is no accounting for this money that is sent
    overseas and it is very clear that United States international adoption
    agencies are making vast sums of money on adoptions, even the ones who
    turned out to be handicapped.
    Agencies continue to resist working collaboratively with adoption
    medicine specialists, families, parent support groups, post-placement
    supportive programs. The problem continues in volumes as the number of
    internationally adopted children rises each year. There is no quality
    control or accountability that the agencies must be held to. There is
    no standard of care, operation, financial accountability or, most
    importantly, securing the most accurate, detailed and honest
    information provided to the families. Families adopting are very
    vulnerable and impressionable, and tend to believe the fantasy as
    opposed to a painful reality which is often the case.
    Despite numerous attempts on my part to educate and offer free
    training to any and all international adoption agencies, I have been
    discounted and under utilized. JCICS recently sponsored the first
    “International Medicine Adoption Conference”, but their practices
    continue as it was very clear that many of the agencies in the audience
    did not want to listen to the potential risk factors as this would
    limit their adoption numbers and profit. They asked for training and
    guidance, but turn around and do the same unethical and insensitive
    practices time and time again.
    Several agencies are under lawsuit at this time for fraudulent
    practice. I would be pleased to provide documentation of pending legal
    cases ranging from Oregon to Ohio to New York to Washington, D.C. to
    Florida to Texas to Arizona involving more than 10 different agencies.
    I continue to provide expert testimony and life planning for many of
    the children that I have evaluated that are severely impaired and for
    families that are in the process of suing their international adoption
    agency for fraudulent adoption practices. I have seen many cases settle
    before the court hearing, but the settlement is “sealed” per the
    request of the adoption agency, but I am aware of the settlement
    amounts and the legal document which were so clear in defining fraud
    and negligence. Currently, I have received requests from literally
    hundreds of families who wish they had the opportunity to tell their
    story to any governmental agency or regulatory body who may invoke some
    type of quality assurance or control over international adoptions. This
    is not just one or two angry families, but a very large cross-sectional
    group of well informed families. Many of these families were hoping
    their concerns would be heard at this type of Senate hearing.
    Without some form of governmental controls and monitoring, the
    problem will continue. International adoption agencies seem to have a
    difficult time in agreeing on how to ratify the Hague Convention as it
    is clear they do not want accountability or monitoring.
    Any area of medicine would be held accountable for their action.
    This is why we maintain a license which is subject to scrutiny by our
    State Boards. International adoption agencies have a license, but are
    not subject to any scrutiny or disciplinary action aside from the times
    they wind up in court–which is on the increase. The more handicapped
    or special needs internationally adopted children coming into the
    country will continue to provide a challenge to the ill-prepared
    family, their educational system, and to the medical and psychiatric
    specialists trying their best to deal with the problems. Most
    importantly, the financial strain on the families can and will result
    in more disrupted adoptions or the child receiving less than optimal
    services.
    With all of these factors in mind, it seems imperative that a
    strong governmental position be taken regarding international adoption
    agencies. Oversight, regulation, control regarding adoption practices
    and financial accountability is of paramount importance.

    Reply

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