In terms of not hearing about 'therapeutic parenting' or any change in parenting technique for her children...yes, I think that is very typical for people who adopted when she did. In 2014, if you are starting an adoption, there is a HUGE amount out there, both in books and freely available on the web, and I would be extremely surprised if social services never spoke about the idea of different parenting strategies for adopted children. I think it's pretty much a given they will mention it and recommend books that go into more detail. So if you (as in, any random person, not you specifically!) didn't know that there is such a thing as parenting a traumatised child differently, I would be stunned and suggest that you must be deliberately not doing any adoption related research
But it was different 10 years ago (I can't remember off the top of my head when Sally adopted, so I'll use 10 years as a ballpark). There wasn't the same wealth of information out there, although there was some information. There have been a huge amount of books for adoptive parents published in the last few years, there weren't nearly as many over a decade ago. But more than that, some adoption agencies were still barely talking about additional needs etc, not mentionning issues that can crop up after trauma and abuse. When I went on the prep course for the second time in 2002, was the idea of attachment issues or attachment disorder mentionned? No it was not. The dangers of high prenatal alcohol intake? No it was not. The idea that traumatised children might need different parenting? It was touched upon, but not explained in anywhere near enough detail, it was vague and unhelpful. Basically the only concrete advice consisted of "never smack". Wow, helpful
And if you go back to the mid or even late 90's....well I would be amazed to find many adopters who were well informed about adoption related issues, I certainly wasn't
And I also think the dead ends with ST and CAMHS is also typical, both then and now. The thing about CAMHS is that it's a post code lottery, some are much better than others, and there are plenty of not-very-good to terrible ones (there are good CAMHS and a few very good CAMHS as well, and plenty of average ones). Massive cutbacks have been making everything worse
Would it have made a difference to her children? Well, in the short term and in the early years, I think that kind of knowledge would have been helpful to the whole family. But long term...well, given how she parents differently now, I don't think in the long term it would make a massive amount of difference. But I'm guessing