An article explaining the role a support group can play in the lives of adopted children and their families. The article also explains how support groups form and five different types of support groups.
The Support for Adoptive Families, Birth Families, and Adoptees is part of the New Beginning community. This community provides many kinds of support groups, including ones for adoptive parents, adult adoptees, and youth adoptees. Although this organization is in Idaho, most meetings are held over Zoom.
This network gives adoptive parents a community of people to share experiences and answers about adoption. They have a list of support groups for parents in Michigan, filtered by county. AFSN also publishes a calendar of all the organization’s events (meet ups, teen groups, etc.).
A list of adoptee support groups, including groups for general adoptee support, international adoptee support, foster care adoptee support, and person of color (POC) adoptee support. The article also includes various other resources for adoptees (organizations, hotlines, therapists).
This is a location-based search directory for adoptee support groups. Profiles include location, contact information, events, and photos. It features a list of the largest adoptee groups and many subgroups for adoptee communities (domestic adoptees, transracial adoptees, adoption reunion, etc.).
This alliance explains the importance of support groups and provides information about their own support group. CAFA’s support group offers general support to parents and caregivers raising their adoptive (or soon-to-be adopted) children. The support group meetings are free, parent-led, and meet monthly.
This article explains the benefits of parent support groups for parents of adoptees. It discusses single parents’ and couples’ challenges and provides some resources for parents interested in exploring support groups.
ICAV’s mission is to educate, support, connect, collaborate, galvanize, and give voice to intercountry adoptees. On this webpage, they provide a list of adoptee groups that can be filtered by country of origin.
This alliance brings adoptive families together in North Carolina. They offer three types of groups: therapist-led, community-led, and a mix of support and education (“support-ucation”). Session donations of $20 are suggested, but all groups are “pay what you can.”
Heart of Adoptions is a private adoption agency. They offer a list of various support groups, and descriptions and contact information for each group. There are single parent, adoptee, mental health, birth family groups, and more.