Age
limits and adolescents Adolescent Health Committee, Canadian Paediatric Society (CPS)
Paediatrics & Child Health 2003;8(9):577
Reference No. AH03-02
Reaffirmed February 2009
Index of position statements from the Adolescent Health Committee
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Medical practitioners involved in the care of adolescents must often deal with an arbitrarily set, chronological threshold between adolescence and adulthood, which varies from province to province and even between jurisdictions within a province. However, while adolescence is a recognizable phase of life, its end is not always easily demarcated. This poses problems for practitioners when adolescent patients require care in facilities with restrictive age limits.
The medical care of adolescents requires knowledge and clinical skills that have traditionally rested with the practice of paediatrics. The Canadian Paediatric Society believes that a definition of adolescence based solely on chronological age is unjustified and impractical. The Society favours a more functional definition based on the biopsychosocial readiness of young people to enter adulthood.
A definition of adolescence
Adolescence begins with the onset of physiologically normal puberty, and
ends when an adult identity and behaviour are accepted. This period of
development corresponds roughly to the period between the ages of 10 and 19
years, which is consistent with the World Health Organization’s definition of
adolescence.
Those responsible for providing healthcare to adolescents
must allow sufficient flexibility in this age span to encompass special
situations such as the emancipated minor or the young person with a chronic
condition leading to delayed development or prolonged dependency.
References
Canadian Paediatric Society. Office practice guidelines for the care of adolescents. <www.cps.ca/english/statements/am/am94-04.htm> (Version current at October 16, 2003).
World Health Organization. Young people’s health – a challenge for society. Report of a Study Group on Young People and Health for All by the Year 2000, Technical Report Series, No. 731. Geneva: World Health Organization, 1986 <http://whqlibdoc.who.int/trs/WHO_TRS_731.pdf> (Version current at September 8, 2003).
Braverman PK, Strasburger VC. Office-based adolescent health care: Issues and solutions. Adolesc Med 1997;8:1-14.
World Health Organization, World Bank Special Programme of Research, Development and Research Training in Human Reproduction (HRP). Guidelines for research on reproductive health involving adolescents. From the Programme’s document Preparing a Project Proposal, Guidelines and Forms (Third Edition)
Mackenzie RG. Adolescent Medicine: A model for the millenium. Adolesc Med 2000;11:13-8.
American Academy of Pediatrics, Council on Child and Adolescent Health. Age limits of pediatrics. Pediatrics 1988;81:736.
Neinstein LS. Adolescent Health Care, A Practical Guide, 4th ed, Philadelphia: Williams & Wilkins, 2002.
Tanner JM. Foetus Into Man. Physical Growth From Conception to Maturity. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1978.
Paone MC, Whitehouse S, Stanford D. The challenges of transition: Coping with a chronic condition. Br Columbia Med J 1998;40:73-5.
Hein K. Issues in adolescent health: An overview.
Carnegie Council on Adolescent Development Working Papers. New York, NY:
Carnegie Corporation of New York, 1988.
Adolescent Health Committee (2002-2003)
Members:
Drs Sheri Findley, Children’s Hospital – Hamilton HSC, Hamilton, Ontario;
Jean-Yves Frappier, Hôpital Sainte-Justine, Montreal, Quebec (co-chair); Eudice
Goldberg, The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Ontario (co-chair); Norman
Goldberg, Manitoba Clinic, Winnipeg, Manitoba (1999-2003); Karen Mary Leslie,
The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Ontario (1997-2003); Douglas McMillan,
Foothills Hospital, Calgary, Alberta (board representative); Michael Westwood,
Beaconsfield, Quebec (1997-2003)
Liaison:
Dr Jorge Pinzon, British Columbia’s Children’s Hospital, Vancouver, British
Columbia (Adolescent Health Section, Canadian Paediatric Society, 2002-2003)
Consultants:
Drs Anna Maria Dominic, Janeway Child Health Centre, St. John’s, Newfoundland
and Labrador; Johanne Harvey, Chicoutimi, Quebec; Miriam Kaufman, The Hospital
for Sick Children, Toronto, Ontario; Andrew Lynk, Cape Breton Regional Hospital,
Sydney, Nova Scotia; Diane Sacks, North York General Hospital, North York,
Ontario; Roger Tonkin, Gabriola Island, British Columbia
Principal
Author: Dr Diane Sacks, North York General Hospital, North York, Ontario
Posted November 2003
| Disclaimer: The recommendations in this position statement do not indicate an exclusive course of treatment or procedure to be followed. Variations, taking into account individual circumstances, may be appropriate. Internet addresses are current at time of publication. |