Stability of care system queried as 320 children put in three or more placements last year

Childrenâs Rights Alliance CEO Tanya Ward said: 'We urgently need to understand why these placements are failing and how we can bring stability to these vulnerable childrenâs lives.' Picture: iStock
More than 320 children were placed in three or more different care placements last year, leading to concern about the stability of the children in the care system.
The figure was up from 179 children in 2020, and accounted for 5.7% of the 5,705 children who were in care last year.
The figures were provided by Tusla to Fianna FĂĄil TD Malcolm Byrne.
Thomas OâDriscoll, a social worker who has care experience, described the figures as troubling. He said: âEach move is not just a change of address, itâs a rupture in trust, belonging, and identity that can echo across a childâs entire life, shaping how they see themselves and their place in the world.â
The placements included in general and relative foster care, and residential care. Tusla said placements for children in care can change for a range of reasons including:
- Changes in circumstances of the foster carers;
- Changes in circumstances within a residential care centre, which may require temporary bed closures;
- Changes in the circumstances of the child where their needs cannot be met within their existing placement, or where a short-term or specialist intervention is required.
The response to Mr Byrne added: âTusla works hard to keep placement moves to a minimum, and every effort is made to place children in a care setting close to their original home where possible. Sometimes children may need to move temporarily, such as to a different county or location, until a more suitable or long-term placement closer to home can be found.â
Mr OâDriscoll said his own experience of having grown up in residential state care means he knows how instability can result. He said:Â
He is calling for an urgent root-and-branch care review in Ireland âthat puts love, stability, trauma-informed care, and childrenâs rights at its centre moving from crisis management to true care.â
He added that âno child should ever feel like theyâre being moved around a system instead of being held within a community of love.â
Childrenâs Rights Alliance chief executive Tanya Ward described the figures as deeply concerning.
âStable placements allow children to build trusting relationships and thrive. When children bounce between placements, trouble follows.Â
EPIC (empowering people in care) chief executive Wayne Stanley said that while placement breakdowns can occur for many reasons, instability in care placements âmay negatively affect childrenâs mental health, relationships, and life outcomes during and after leaving careâ.