Tuesday, March 3, 2009

The Matching Room


Since Chinese adoption workers will soon be deciding who you new niece, cousin, or friend is going to be, I thought folks might like to know how they decide which baby goes with which family - here's some info modified from the China Adopt Talk wed site.


How the Matching Room works
First, they review the baby dossiers and make sure there are no issues with them. We are told that they then count up all of the baby dossiers that are eligible for matching that month and then look to see how far this stack will go in the parent dossiers without sending out a partial day, and they pull all of those parent files. That is the likely cut-off date. Sometimes something happens and they don't get this far. Sometimes something happens and they get farther.

Next they match orphanages up with agencies. This orphanage has six babies, this agency has six families. These two orphanages are in the same province and have a total of 12 babies, this agency has 12 families. When they are through with this is when (I believe) some agencies start to get information about the cut-off date. Or at least it is when they used to start getting information.

And then they start matching individual babies to individual families. The next question that comes up is generally how the matchers match families and babies. I’ve heard from several people who have had the opportunity to speak with someone who works in the matching room. The various conversations seem to all agree that they first look for something that stands out: a matching birthday, a baby who looks a lot like a parent, or a baby who likes music and a parent who teaches music. Several matching people have stated they match by bone structure of the baby’s face and the parent’s faces (this is why they need our passport photos, so they can compare our mug shot with the baby’s mug shot). Some have stated that they used Chinese astrology, also. Once they’ve matched the obvious matches they then start to look at things like age of child requested. The age requested is not a priority for them, they feel they are matching families and not filling orders.

Lori's comments: But we all know Who really makes the decisions - and I'm trusting in Him to bring my daughter to me at last. I've met so many families who know their daughter was the perfect match - Jenny insists Abbey is more like her than her biological son and Allison Grace looks so much like Meredith I can't believe it! He knows who are daughters are and I know He'll make sure we're together.