Skip to main navigation. Skip to main content.
workhealthlife
 
Your Employee Assistance Program is a support service that can help you take the first step toward change.
 
 
  • Register
  • |
  • Log in
  • |
  • Search organization
Morneau Shepell
Woman walking on the beach, leaving footsteps in the sand.

Welcome to your Beneficiary Assistance Program.

If you do not know your username please call 800-227-8620 for assistance or contact your administrator.

workhealthlife
 
Your Employee Assistance Program is a support service that can help you take the first step toward change.
 
Woman walking on the beach, leaving footsteps in the sand.

Take the first step towards change

We're an Employee Assistance Program (EAP) that provides you and your family with immediate and confidential support to help resolve work, health, and life challenges to improve your life. Let us help you find solutions so you can reach your goals at any age or stage of life. We help millions of people worldwide live healthy, happy, and productive lives.

Ready to start? You can login or search for your organization for faster access to your resources and tools.
Not a member yet? Join today for free
or

    We found several matches. If you cannot find your organization in the list below, please refine your search by entering more characters or checking the full name of your organization. If you continue to experience challenges, please contact us.
    Don't know your organization? It could be where you work, your union, state, or an association you belong to.

    If you are still not sure, browse as a guest or call 1.866.468.9461

    Why members use the program

    Always

    Always confidential

    Access and use of the program is completely confidential. No one, including your employer, coworkers or family, will ever know that you used the program unless you choose to tell them.
    Help

    Help you need

    Having a baby or buying a new home? Want to improve your relationship or manage stress better? We have resources and tools to help on just about any topic.
    Help

    Help how you want

    Find the support that is right for your lifestyle and comfort level. Choose from online programs, consultation by phone, live chat, and more.
    Available

    Available anytime, anywhere

    You're constantly on the move, switching from your computer to your phone at a moment's notice. We have you covered with confidential access to support anywhere and everywhere you go.
    Pick

    Pick your support

    When you connect with us, we'll help you pick the right support. Within a few minutes, you'll be set up to take your first step towards change.
    No

    No cost

    There is no cost to you to use the program. This benefit is provided to you by your employer, insurance carrier, association, or other party.
    Home
    • Home
    • my services
      Log in or tell us your organization to view your services.
      Is your organization interested in offering these services?
      • Professional Counseling
      • Financial Support
      • Legal Support
      • Nutrition Support
      • Family Support
      • Health Coaching
      • Naturopathic Services
      • Fitness Support
    • health & well-being

      Your physical and mental well-being has a significant impact on your day-to-day life. The more you know, the better you'll feel.

      • Emotional Well-being (articles 50)
      • Mental Health (articles 42)
      • Family & Relationships (articles 50)
      • Diversity and inclusion (articles 9)
      • Addictions (articles 32)
      • Diseases & Conditions (articles 7)
      • COVID-19 resources (articles 46)
      • Physical Well-being (articles 21)
    • career & workplace

      Let us help you manage your career, better handle workplace relationships, and find work-life balance.

      • Health & Attitude (articles 43)
      • Coping With Change on the Job (articles 16)
      • Time Management (articles 16)
      • Stress/Burnout (articles 17)
      • Traumatic Events (articles 13)
      • Career Development & Continuing Education (articles 24)
      • Conflict & Communication (articles 48)
      • Workplace Leave (articles 8)
    • financial security

      We can all use a little help understanding and managing finances. Learn more through educational articles, resources, and tools to support you in achieving financial well-being.

      • Financial Planning (articles 18)
      • Credit & Debt Management (articles 6)
      • Budgeting (articles 22)
      • Investing (articles 5)
      • Retirement (articles 11)
      • Will Preparation (articles 3)
      • Legal (articles 5)
      • Real Estate/Mortgages (articles 10)
    • life events

      Find information on a wide variety of topics to better inform and support you during life events and times of change.

      • Death of a Loved One (articles 4)
      • Planning Retirement (articles 10)
      • Dealing with a Disability/Serious Illness (articles 13)
      • Getting Separated/Divorced (articles 7)
      • Parenting (articles 24)
      • Buying/Selling a House (articles 3)
      • New Employee (articles 33)
      • Getting Married (including common law) (articles 4)
      • Having a Baby (or Adopting) (articles 15)
    health & well-being Covid 19
    • Home »
    • health & well-being »
    • Covid 19 »

    Adoption

    Bookmark Article

    While anyone can choose to care for a child in need for short or long-term periods, such as a foster care situation, adoption is a different situation that requires a much different commitment. Adoption is the legal act of permanently placing a child with a parent or parents other than the birth parents. In this process, the parental rights of the birth parents are permanently terminated. The adoptive parents then assume full legal responsibility for the child. The child, in turn, gains the same legal rights as that of a child born to the adoptive parents.

    Adoption means that the connection between the child and the caregiver is legal and binding on both parties, not just convenient. It makes it a crime for the caregiver to abandon the child. It also makes it legal for the adoptive parents to make decisions that seriously influence the child's destiny: what type of religious education will occur; what schools the child will attend; methods of discipline that will be used, etc. A casual caregiver would not be subject to the same penalties under the law.

    Adoption involves a great deal of paperwork, as well as the assistance of lawyers, social workers, and judges to finalize the process. It is a permanent arrangement, just like a natural parent-child relationship. However, for most families, adoption is ultimately an act of love and the desire to enrich their family and the life of the child who becomes a part of that family.

    Choosing to Adopt

    There are many reasons why people choose to adopt a child. Although the most basic reason is a desire to build or expand a family, the specific reasons that motivate each adoption vary.

    Some adoptive parents choose to adopt a child because they are infertile (medically unable to bear children). One or both partners in an adoptive family may be infertile. The most common reason a female may be infertile is her age. Unlike male fertility, which tends to stay viable into old age, female fertility begins to decline sharply at or around a woman's 35th birthday, and by age 45 or so, it may be more or less impossible for a woman to conceive naturally. Given the large number of women who have chosen to put off having a family until they have established careers, this problem has become unfortunately and increasingly common.

    Infertile couples that seek to adopt may have no children or they may have existing children they conceived when they were younger. In the former case, the adoptive parents may have attempted for years to conceive a birth, but ultimately be forced to the conclusion that they cannot have their own child due to infertility. They still desire to raise children, and make a choice to adopt. In the latter case, the adoptive parents may wish to have a larger family than they currently do and be unable to accomplish this naturally due to infertility. In addition, the adoptive parents may specifically wish to add a girl or a boy to their family.

    Infertility is not the only motivation for adoption. Some adoptive parents may have learned that while they can have a natural child, they are at risk for passing on serious genetic or medical conditions and so choose not to attempt a natural pregnancy. Alternatively, a potential birth mother may not be able to risk a natural pregnancy due to her own health complications and choose adoption over the risk of pregnancy.

    Some families choose to adopt because they believe they will be saving a child who otherwise would not grow up with the benefits of a loving and supportive family. Such a belief in the goodness of saving a child through adoption often has its genesis in adoptive parent's religious, ethical, and/or emotional feelings and their desire to make the world a better place, even if only for a single child or a few children. In this case, adoption is a means of saving the world, one child at a time.

    Still other adoptive parents choose adoption because they lack an appropriate partner. It takes genetic material from both a man and a woman in order to produce a viable baby. Single people and established homosexual couples may choose to adopt a child rather than use a sperm donor or surrogate mother to produce a natural child.

    Finally, a very common form of adoption in the United States and other Western Countries is stepparent adoption. In this case, one or more partners from a couple that have married and combined children from prior relationships into one household choose to adopt the birth child or children of their partner.

    Children who are waiting to be adopted arise from several different circumstances. First, there are those mothers who find themselves pregnant while not in a committed relationship or feel that they are too young or not ready/willing to accept the responsibility that comes with raising a child. In this case, the mother may decide that for the child and/or herself, it is best to place the child for adoption.

    Share:

    • 1
    • 2


    Related Articles

    Explaining Adoption to Your Child
    Who Can Adopt?
    Adoption Options
    Adopting a Child
    View all resources
    © 2025 LifeWorks (Canada) Ltd. Your program may not include all services described on this website, please refer to your benefit material for more information. For immediate assistance, call 1.844.880.9137.
    COC
    Back to top
    CTOR-UAT360C
    •  
    •  
    •  
    •  
    •  
    •  
    •  
    •  
    •  
    •  
    •  
    •  
    •  
    •  
    •  
    •  
    •  
    •  
    •  
    •  
    •  
    •  
    •  
    Processing

    Processing