Age as a problematic criterion
In the last decade, the rhetoric of ‘transition’ has been used to frame discussions pertaining to transferring young people from pediatric to adult services and settings. Traditional transition initiatives typically focused on health services; however, they are increasingly concerned with ‘life transitions’ and support services enabling young people to take up adult social roles, thereby moving from one life stage (childhood) to another (adulthood) [
10]. Conceptually, ‘transitions’ reflects a short-term view of life changes, whereas the term ‘trajectories’ provides a longer view of changes over the life span [
11]. However, profoundly impaired children do not fit easily into these dominant formulations. Neither transitions nor trajectories are applicable or relevant to them in any traditional sense of increasing independence and changing roles commonly associated with adulthood.
We concur with Priestley [
12] that adulthood is an identity category, a socially constructed division from childhood that is aligned with chronological age. As children age they are expected to acquire the abilities, privileges, responsibilities and characteristics associated with the prevailing socio-cultural understandings of adulthood. In most Western countries, adulthood is marked by achievement of residential and financial independence from parents, as well as emotional self-reliance, cognitive self-sufficiency and behavioral self-control [
12,
13]. Expectations of this ‘developmental progression’ from child to adult status are embedded in social norms, rituals and laws as well as educational, psychological and biomedical discourses [
9].
There is little research or scholarship examining institutional placement and transfer for profoundly impaired young people who cannot assume adult social roles [
14,
15], with the exception of a growing body of work oriented towards moving children and young people out of institutions into the community [
16‐
22]. Empirical research and policy reform point to the inadequacy of adult-oriented long-term care homes for younger adults, and have grounded calls for increased services to allow children to live in family homes and/or family-friendly group home settings [
15,
21,
23,
24].
Research has aimed to address the wellbeing of affected young people and their families, but in most cases has not directly considered the needs of the most profoundly impaired young people. Moreover, we have found no research questioning or investigating age-based criteria for institutional placement or transfer for this group. Across the literature there is a prevalent assumption that disabled youth share similar transition needs vis-à-vis transferring to adult services. For example, Doug
et al. [
25] conducted a systematic review of transitions services for young people with life limiting conditions and concluded that services needed to be ‘appropriate for chronological age and developmental stage’ (p.9). None of the 92 papers from seven countries in this systematic review appear to have raised the possibility that age criteria may not be applicable to all children and young people. The ‘transitions’ described included models where young people remained with a pediatric provider team, but invariably these models were construed as problematic and related to lack of available adult programs, and/or families and providers having trouble ‘letting go’ due to ‘emotional attachments’. Although we do not dispute that moving from pediatric to adult-based care may be beneficial for many young people, we argue that the universal application of age criteria is problematic. Profoundly disabled young people may have substantially different care needs that require individualized consideration.
Critiques of the use of age criteria and their role in structuring health and social services have come primarily from the social sciences [
12,
26‐
28] and the growing field of antidevelopmental psychology [
9,
29‐
34]. These critics assert that the stages of the life course (childhood, adulthood, old age) are culturally produced and grounded in assumptions derived from historical roots and misrecognized as biological facts [
35]. These ideas have global resonance
b but closely align with Western notions of individualism and progress [
32]. Meyer [
36], for example, suggests that American social ‘problems’ might not be construed as problematic in societies less focused on the individual and an assumed proper life course. She notes that it is not surprising that systems and organizations perpetuate life stage divisions because they are designed to do so. Similarly, Priestly [
12,
35] has suggested that an ‘idealised’ life course trajectory that pivots around the notion of independent adulthood has defined the boundaries of welfare entitlements in the UK and elsewhere. He notes that age and disability categories have been important historical factors in the control of labor supply and continue to be used to determine health and welfare policies (for examples of age-based policies see [
37‐
41]). Priestly [
35] suggests that age-based transition policies have had the effect of relegating some people with disabilities to a liminal ‘nether world’ of unresolved transitions putatively designed to approximate adult roles.
The lives of profoundly impaired individuals do not conform to a developmental trajectory of progressive self-sufficiency from childhood to adulthood. Their impairments render it impossible to live or work independently, and they require ongoing intense services and supports throughout their lives. Moreover, except for physical/biological changes, a developmental perspective to human growth and adaptation over the lifespan has minimal relevance. The development of self-regulative capacity to adapt to different conditions and contexts [
42] has little application to persons with complex, profound impairments.
It follows that moving profoundly impaired young people from one institutional setting to another solely on the basis of age may be ill-advised and even harmful to them and others. Such moves may needlessly disrupt their lives and those of their families [
43] and sever established relationships with care providers that have developed over months or years [
44]. Arguments supporting such transfers point to the value of communal living with same age peers, and engaging in age-appropriate activities. However, these worthy goals may be inappropriate for individuals who are minimally interactive and/or where positive interactions would be equally feasible in intergenerational settings. Age is only one possible characteristic shared with other residents and may be of little importance. Because long-term care settings are important interactive spaces for families, it may be as, or more, relevant to consider the similitude of family members’ needs and situations. Thus, ‘age’ and/or life stage are difficult criteria to use in support of institutional accommodation and care requirements.
The importance of home
Because most profoundly impaired persons continuously (or episodically) live in institutional settings, moving from one setting to another may be inimical to their wellbeing. These facilities are ‘homes’ and comprise stable venues for ongoing family engagement. Long term relationships also develop with staff members who know the person’s needs and responses, have developed effective routines and uses of familiar devices, equipment and adaptations, and may be best positioned to ‘read’ non-verbal cues as rhythms of daily life become established over time [
44,
45]. Institutional homes, like any homes, are relational spaces composed of much more than bricks and mortar. They include the dynamics of the persons and processes that occur within them in the context of their local and larger communities. One’s home is fundamental in shaping everyday life by providing a sense of continuity, security and safety [
15‐
18]. Ideally, homes are places where inhabitants establish and maintain relationships and trust. Homes have been conceptualized as ‘a space of comfort’ created in a never-ending process [
46]. They can be places of healthcare work or familial relationships, places of comfort or, conversely, sites of abuse, pain and neglect. They are thus more than material structures because they reflect the presence, habits and effects of their occupants [
47].
Given the significance of home to human wellbeing, questions of placement, discharge or transfer of profoundly impaired people from one institutional setting to another are clearly important. Changing homes is not just a change in locale, and involves more than procuring a bed space or providing routine health and care services. Housing is central to the health and wellbeing of all individuals and their families [
48]. Homes are the locus of personal relationships which, in this instance, include care relationships [
48]. This raises the question, ‘For whom is it a problem if profoundly impaired persons live in one long-term care setting throughout their lives?’ Certainly institutional lifetime homes are problematic in jurisdictions where prevailing institutional arrangements and public funding models separate child from adult care. Are there better ways and environments for these individuals and their families to live and flourish?
Future directions
If age is not taken for granted as the cardinal criterion for placement decisions, other alternatives can be considered. As noted above, very little research has investigated the institutional care needs of profoundly impaired children and young people. Thus, rather than provide definitive solutions, in this section we signpost some possible considerations and emerging models that could ground further inquiry.
In previous work we have suggested that, at a minimum, all homes should promote individual dignity beyond the provision of safety and basic care [
23]. Furthermore, Asch and colleagues [
49] posit that institutional homes should be designed to enable continuity of services across the lifespan as residents’ care needs change over time. They also suggest that the typical ‘horizontal delivery’ of services, where all persons receive the same services in the same setting, be replaced with ‘vertical delivery’ facilities to meet residents’ needs as they age, with reasonably consistent cohorts of service providers.
Support for vertical care is further reflected in notions of lifetime homes for disabled people [
50]. Lifetime homes are designed as adaptable spaces to accommodate individuals as they age and their functional abilities decline (or improve) [
51]. Vertical care and lifetime homes are both consistent with the goal of continuous care over the life course. Currently, ‘life course’ is typically articulated as the period from early adulthood to old age, but we agree with Imrie [
50] that this limited view should be expanded to include childhood. Regardless of age of onset, the idea that individuals with lifelong profound impairments could potentially benefit from living in stable environments warrants further investigation. Such environments may provide opportunities for the collective ‘home making’ activities of impaired individuals, families and care providers over time [
52]. Research and pilot programs are needed to investigate these possible benefits and to inform policy and practice.
Decisions regarding where and how profoundly impaired individuals should live inevitably rest on questions of what constitutes a ‘good life’ for those unable to articulate their preferences. Recent neuro-imaging research has shown it is possible to communicate with some ‘behaviorally non-responsive’ individuals who have the ability to respond to commands through wilfully modulating their brain activity [
53]. Such research raises questions about our limited understandings of the inner worlds of profoundly impaired individuals and their potential awareness of their surroundings. Their abilities to experience suffering, security or contentment may vary widely but cannot yet be easily discerned. In many cases, parents and caregivers learn to ‘read’ profoundly impaired young people over time, to understand when they are uncomfortable or in pain, or are experiencing pleasure or comfort [
45]. Nevertheless, it is difficult to ascertain what gives meaning, contentment or joy to their lives, or if indeed these are the right questions to ask. As a starting point, we suggest that care should be oriented towards preventing or removing harms – pain, distress, insecurity and suffering - as much as it is possible to discern signs of these experiences. As part of this approach, decisions related to home placement or transfer need to consider carefully the potential harms associated with such moves.
Parents’ priorities provide some direction in establishing placement/transfer criteria as alternatives to age. Research conducted by Rabiee
et al. [
54] found that many parents of children with complex health care needs prioritized comfort and relief of pain over other outcomes, and saw comfort as necessary for achieving other outcomes, such as learning to eat by mouth, or increasing interactions. Children’s quality of life, even if parents’ could not easily define it, was important and prioritized over longevity. Similar research has demonstrated the importance of lasting, trusting partnerships between parents of disabled children and professionals [
55]. Identified features of high quality partnerships included staff members who appeared to understand children’s conditions, skilfully met their needs, and treated them with respect and partnerships characterized by continuity of professional staff members [
43,
44,
55].
To conclude, we suggest that decisions regarding placement for profoundly impaired persons should not be made using the limited criteria of age, physical safety and the provision of bodily care. The latter two provisions are necessary but insufficient conditions that reduce persons to objects of care and fail to address their inherent dignity
qua human beings [
56]. Second, ‘transitions’ models oriented to preparing children for the ‘next stage’ in life may be less appropriate for profoundly impaired young people who are not expected to change roles or activities in any traditional way. Instead, their accommodation needs might more closely align with palliative care goals to support individuals and families to ‘live well in the present,’ to enjoy what they bring to each other’s lives, support meaningful interactions and minimize suffering and family burdens [
57]. We suggest that, in accord with the World Health Organization’s principles [
58], care for profoundly impaired individuals needs to be provided across the life course, be focused on relieving human distress, support individuals and their families, and be directed towards body, mind and spirit. Within the context of these principles, arbitrary age criteria for transferring vulnerable young people to adult facilities are, at best, insufficient. Transfer policies should be re-examined in terms of how homes enable or impede the care of profoundly impaired individuals and support family-centered care.
For the foreseeable future, at least some profoundly impaired young people will continue to require institution-based care. Given this reality, there is a pressing need for interdisciplinary research to develop and evaluate alternative service models. We envision partnerships between child health researchers, social scientists and policy makers working closely with care providers and families to determine what best meets their needs. A useful starting place could be targeted pilot case study research with families who wish to remain in pediatric facilities, working in partnership to develop models of care delivery and family supports.