Adoption of Lisette ( 2018 )


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    17-P-644                                            Appeals Court
    ADOPTION OF LISETTE (and a companion case1).
    No. 17-P-644.
    Essex.       December 1, 2017. - May 30, 2018.
    Present:   Agnes, Blake, & McDonough, JJ.
    Adoption, Care and protection, Dispensing with parent's consent.
    Minor, Adoption. Parent and Child, Adoption, Dispensing
    with parent's consent to adoption. Evidence, Medical
    record.
    Petitions filed in the Essex County Division of the
    Juvenile Court Department on February 10, 2014, and October 2,
    2014.
    The cases were heard by José A. Sánchez, J.
    Robert E. Curtis, Jr., for the mother.
    Brian Pariser for Department of Children and Families.
    Debra Perrotta Dow for the children.
    McDONOUGH, J.    In this case, we are called on to balance
    two compelling interests:    the need to protect the privacy of
    persons seeking drug rehabilitation treatment from having their
    1   Adoption of Adam.   The children's names are pseudonyms.
    2
    treatment records disclosed against their will, and the crucial
    need to protect children from abuse and neglect and promote
    their best interests.   We conclude that under the limited
    circumstances of this case, the best interests of the children
    outweigh the mother's right to confidentiality in information
    concerning her treatment.
    Following a trial in the Juvenile Court in 2016, the judge
    found the mother unfit2 to care for her two children, Lisette and
    Adam, and that termination of her parental rights was in their
    best interests.   See G. L. c. 119, § 26; G. L. c. 210, § 3.     On
    appeal, the mother contends that the judge erred by (1) ordering
    the drug rehabilitation program in which she was enrolled to
    produce an affidavit giving the reasons for her departure from
    that program; and (2) failing to find a nexus between her
    "shortcomings" and a risk of harm to the children.   We affirm
    the decrees entered by the Juvenile Court judge terminating the
    mother's parental rights.
    2 Despite the moral overtones of the statutory term "unfit,"
    the judge's decision is not a moral judgment, nor is it a
    determination that the parent does not love the children. The
    question for the judge is "whether the parent's deficiencies
    'place the child[ren] at serious risk of peril from abuse,
    neglect, or other activity harmful to the child[ren].'"
    Adoption of Olivette, 
    79 Mass. App. Ct. 141
    , 157 (2011), quoting
    from Care & Protection of Bruce, 
    44 Mass. App. Ct. 758
    , 761
    (1998).
    3
    Background.   The following facts found by the judge are
    amply supported by the record.3    In 2007, the mother gave birth
    to Lisette.   The mother and Lisette's biological father were in
    a relationship at the time, but are no longer together.4      The
    mother later began a relationship with Adam's father, and Adam
    was born in December of 2013.5    The mother continued to have an
    on-and-off relationship with Adam's father up through the time
    of trial.
    The mother has an extensive history with the Department of
    Children and Families (department), and a long history of
    substance abuse and domestic violence.    She "has a consistent
    pattern of abusing heroin and failing to engage in services to
    help her maintain her sobriety."    She tested positive for
    opiates when admitted to the hospital prior to Adam's birth in
    December of 2013, and tested positive for benzodiazepines in
    January of 2014.   The mother also admitted that she used cocaine
    from September of 2015 until she enrolled, just before trial, in
    a rehabilitation program in March of 2016.
    3 The mother does not challenge the judge's factual
    findings, aside from two specific findings discussed in more
    detail infra.
    4 Lisette's father stipulated to his unfitness at trial, and
    is not a party to this appeal.
    5 Adam's father did not participate in the proceedings below
    and has not appealed from the termination of his parental
    rights.
    4
    The mother also has a history of domestic violence with
    both of the children's fathers.     In July of 2014, police
    responded to the mother's home for reports of a domestic
    disturbance between her and Adam's father.     One month later, the
    mother obtained a G. L. c. 209A restraining order against Adam's
    father, stating in her affidavit that he spit in her face,
    grabbed her throat and choked her, then grabbed her hair and
    threatened to kill her.   After she locked him out of the house,
    he tried to reenter through a window.     When the mother tried to
    stop him, he pulled her halfway out the window by her hair.       On
    another occasion, the mother testified that Adam's father tied
    her up with an electric cord.     Despite her reported concerns
    about Adam's father and her active restraining order against
    him, the mother continued to allow him in her home.     The
    department filed a care and protection petition on behalf of
    Lisette after receiving a report that Lisette found Adam's
    father in the mother's bed.     After a temporary custody hearing,
    the judge granted the department custody of Lisette, and she has
    remained in the department's custody since then.
    Adam first came to the department's attention in December,
    2013, at just five days old.    He was born when the mother was
    twenty-six weeks pregnant, and he tested positive for methadone
    at birth.   The mother also tested positive for methadone and
    opiates when she arrived at the hospital to give birth to Adam.
    5
    Adam was diagnosed with Klinefelter syndrome, a rare condition
    characterized by an XXY chromosome, resulting in medical and
    behavioral complications including delayed speech, learning
    disabilities, and behavioral problems.    Due to his premature
    birth and his diagnosis of Klinefelter syndrome, Adam presented
    with challenging medical issues necessitating numerous specialty
    appointments.   These conditions caused feeding problems
    requiring a special formula and special bottle nipples so he
    could eat.
    The hospital set up training for the mother to teach her
    how to make Adam's special formula.    When the mother failed to
    attend, the hospital rescheduled the training to the following
    day.    The mother arrived late to the training, and she failed to
    purchase the necessary bottle nipples.    The mother then failed
    to show up for another training session.    Prior to Adam's
    expected discharge, the hospital encouraged the mother to spend
    more time at the hospital to ensure that she learned his proper
    care.    The hospital's social worker described the mother's
    visits as "infrequent and sporadic."     The hospital social worker
    informed the department that the mother failed to provide a
    prescription for Adam's seizure medication, failed to provide
    the special bottle nipples for his feedings, and failed to
    provide his insurance information.    Several days later, the
    department filed a care and protection petition for Adam and
    6
    took emergency custody of him.   Following his hospital
    discharge, the department placed him in foster care, where he
    remains.
    During trial, the department learned that the inpatient
    rehabilitation treatment program (program) where the mother had
    been enrolled had discharged her.   The department subpoenaed the
    mother's program records relating to the reasons for her
    discharge.   Citing the patient confidentiality provisions set
    forth in 42 U.S.C. § 290dd-2 (2012), the program manager
    objected to the department's subpoena.   At a hearing on the
    program manager's objection, the judge suggested -- as a less
    intrusive alternative -- that he order the program manager to
    prepare an affidavit limited to the circumstances of the
    mother's discharge.   The parties, including the mother's
    counsel, agreed,6 and the next day the program manager submitted
    the affidavit,7 which the judge admitted in evidence over the
    6 The mother's counsel supported the judge's proposed
    affidavit alternative, saying: "I think the affidavit is great.
    I don't have a problem with that." Nevertheless, the judge made
    clear that the parties' acceptance of his affidavit alternative
    was "[w]ithout waiving any objection." The next day, when the
    department offered the program manager's affidavit in evidence,
    the mother's counsel objected.
    7 In her affidavit, the program manager stated that "[i]n
    accordance with the [program's] Progressive Discipline Policy,
    [the mother] was terminated from the [program] on May 16, 2016,
    after receiving four (4) Safety Notices." The mother received
    the notices after twice failing to sign back into the program
    after appointments and for having cigarettes in her room. The
    7
    mother's objection.     The mother contends that the judge admitted
    the program manager's affidavit in violation of the
    confidentiality provisions of 42 U.S.C. § 290dd-2.
    Discussion.   1.   Disclosure of treatment records.   Title 42
    U.S.C. § 290dd-2(a) provides that "[r]ecords of the identity,
    diagnosis, prognosis, or treatment of any patient which are
    maintained in connection with the performance of any program or
    activity relating to substance abuse education, prevention,
    training, treatment, rehabilitation, or research, which is
    conducted, regulated, or directly or indirectly assisted by any
    department or agency of the United States shall . . . be
    confidential. . . ."    The broad purpose of the statute is to
    protect the confidentiality of persons seeking treatment for
    substance abuse.   See Whyte v. Connecticut Mut. Life Ins. Co.,
    
    818 F.2d 1005
    , 1010 (1st Cir. 1987).8    However, while the statute
    fourth notice issued after the mother (1) returned from an
    appointment apparently under the influence of "some substance,"
    despite a drug screen that came back clean, and (2) for being
    unaccounted for on the next day for some two and one-half hours,
    returning apparently under the influence of an unknown
    substance. The program's disciplinary policy states that after
    receiving three notices, a resident may be terminated from the
    program.
    8 The Whyte decision refers to a prior version of the
    statute, before it was reorganized and renumbered in 1992; the
    language of the statute has not materially changed. See Act
    July 10, 1992, P.L. 102-321, Title I, Subtitle C, § 131, 
    106 Stat. 366
    . At the time of the decision in Whyte, regulations
    barred the disclosure of all communications; only "objective
    data" was subject to disclosure. See 
    42 C.F.R. § 2.63
     (1975).
    8
    protects treatment records and their content from disclosure
    absent patient consent, Congress recognized that in limited
    circumstances, release of protected information might be
    necessary.   See 42 U.S.C. § 290dd-2(b); 
    42 C.F.R. § 2.64
     (1987).
    One such circumstance is where disclosure is "authorized by an
    appropriate order of a court of competent jurisdiction granted
    after application showing good cause therefor."   42 U.S.C.
    § 290dd-2(b)(2)(C).   Regulations promulgated pursuant to that
    After the decision in Whyte, the regulation was amended to allow
    for the court-ordered disclosure of "confidential
    communications" as well. See 
    42 C.F.R. § 2.63
     (1987), which
    permitted court orders authorizing disclosure of confidential
    communications between a patient and treatment program only if:
    "(1) The disclosure is necessary to protect against an
    existing threat to life or of serious bodily injury,
    including circumstances which constitute suspected child
    abuse and neglect and verbal threats against third parties;
    "(2) The disclosure is necessary in connection with
    investigation or prosecution of an extremely serious crime,
    such as one which directly threatens loss of life or
    serious bodily injury, including homicide, rape,
    kidnapping, armed robbery, assault with a deadly weapon, or
    child abuse and neglect; or
    "(3) The disclosure is in connection with litigation or an
    administrative proceeding in which the patient offers
    testimony or other evidence pertaining to the content of
    the confidential communications."
    We note that 
    42 C.F.R. § 2.63
    (2) was amended in 2017 to read as
    follows: "The disclosure is necessary in connection with
    investigation or prosecution of an extremely serious crime
    allegedly committed by the patient, such as one which directly
    threatens loss of life or serious bodily injury, including
    homicide, rape, kidnapping, armed robbery, assault with a deadly
    weapon, or child abuse and neglect."
    9
    statute require that a court's determination of "good cause" be
    based on two findings:     "(1) Other ways of obtaining the
    information are not available or would not be effective; and (2)
    The public interest and need for the disclosure outweigh the
    potential injury to the patient, the physician-patient
    relationship and the treatment services."    
    42 C.F.R. § 2.64
    (d).
    If good cause is established, the court must limit disclosure to
    those portions of the records that are "essential to fulfill the
    objective of the order."    
    42 C.F.R. § 2.64
    (e).   In addition, 
    42 C.F.R. § 2.61
    (a) (1987) provides that "[a]n order of a court of
    competent jurisdiction entered under this subpart is a unique
    kind of court order.     Its only purpose is to authorize a
    disclosure or use of patient information which would otherwise
    be prohibited by 42 U.S.C. [§] 290dd-2 and the regulations in
    this part.   Such an order does not compel disclosure.    A
    subpoena or a similar legal mandate must be issued in order to
    compel disclosure.     This mandate may be entered at the same time
    as and accompany an authorizing court order entered under the
    regulations in this part."9
    a.   Other available effective methods.    Our first task is
    to determine whether there was another available effective way
    9 Here, there was both a subpoena issued by the department
    to the program and an order issued by the judge, thereby
    compelling the production of the program manager's affidavit at
    issue.
    10
    to obtain the program discharge information other than by
    affidavit based on facts derived from the mother's program
    records.   In its subpoena to the program manager, the department
    sought "[a]ny documents and information regarding the discharge
    of [the mother]."   At the hearing on the program manager's
    objection to the subpoena, the department's counsel made clear
    that the department sought only information about the
    circumstances of the mother's discharge from the program and any
    documentation relating to that narrow issue.    The judge
    determined that an affidavit narrowly tailored to the reasons
    for the mother's discharge would sufficiently cover the issue
    the department sought to explore at trial.     Counsel for both the
    mother and the program agreed that an affidavit so limited would
    be preferable to disclosing any of the mother's treatment
    records.
    On appeal, the mother maintains that the department had
    other sources from which to obtain this evidence, namely, either
    her own testimony or the testimony of the department's social
    worker assigned to the mother's case.   In making her argument,
    the mother overlooks significant evidentiary obstacles.
    Testimony from the department social worker about what the
    program's staff told her about the mother's discharge would
    11
    constitute inadmissible hearsay.10,11   See generally Mass. G.
    Evid. § 801 (2018).   Furthermore, putting aside the hearsay
    problem, even were the mother to authorize the program to
    disclose to the department's social worker the details of the
    mother's discharge, regulations promulgated under 42 U.S.C.
    § 290dd-2 would bar the social worker from redisclosing that
    information in court, without the mother's consent.    See 
    42 C.F.R. § 2.32
    (a)(1) (1987) (disclosures made with patient's
    consent must be accompanied by notice stating that "federal
    rules prohibit you from making any further disclosure of
    information in this record").   With regard to the mother's
    testimony explaining her discharge, the judge determined that
    absent an independent source, he doubted he could rely on the
    mother's testimony alone.   This decision was well within the
    judge's discretion.   See Care & Protection of Three Minors, 
    392 Mass. 704
    , 711 (1984) (judge is not required to view evidence
    10Indeed, when a different social worker testified, the
    judge sustained objections to questions about what the program's
    staff told him about the mother's level of compliance.
    11While it is true that certain types of hearsay are
    admissible in care and protection proceedings, it does not
    appear that any of those exceptions would have governed this
    issue. See Care & Protection of Rebecca, 
    419 Mass. 67
    , 80-81
    (1994) (child's hearsay statements regarding sexual abuse
    admissible pursuant to G. L. c. 233, § 83); Custody of Michel,
    
    28 Mass. App. Ct. 260
    , 265-268 (1990) (hearsay contained in
    investigator's reports and in G. L. c. 119, §§ 51A and 51B,
    reports admissible). See also Mass. G. Evid. § 1115 (2018).
    12
    from mother's perspective).    Thus, we agree with the judge that
    there was no available effective way for the department to
    provide evidence of the circumstances surrounding the mother's
    discharge from the program, other than through the program
    manager's affidavit.
    b.   Need for disclosure.    Having concluded that other than
    obtaining the program manager's affidavit, there existed no
    effective means for the department to obtain admissible evidence
    of the circumstances of the mother's program discharge, we turn
    to the second step of 
    42 C.F.R. § 2.64
    (d):    weighing the public
    interest and need for disclosure against the potential injury to
    the mother, the physician-patient relationship, and the
    treatment program.    In assessing the public interest, our courts
    have long held that in care and protection matters, the
    interests of a child in being free from abuse and neglect, and
    the Commonwealth's interests in protecting the child's welfare,
    outweighs the concerns of the parent.    See Custody of a Minor,
    
    375 Mass. 733
    , 749 (1978), quoting from Purinton v. Jamrock, 
    195 Mass. 187
    , 199 (1907) ("[W]here a child's well-being is placed
    in issue, 'it is not the rights of the parents that are chiefly
    to be considered.    The first and paramount duty is to consult
    the welfare of the child'"); Care & Protection of Robert, 
    408 Mass. 52
    , 62 (1990) ("The child's interest in freedom from
    abusive or neglectful behavior, however, is absolute.     In no
    13
    situation may a child be legitimately subjected to abusive or
    neglectful conditions").12
    The need for the narrowly tailored evidence explaining the
    mother's discharge from the program also supports disclosure.
    The purpose of care and protection proceedings is "to insure the
    rights of any child to sound health and normal physical, mental,
    spiritual and moral development."   G. L. c. 119, § 1, as amended
    by St. 2008, c. 176, § 82.   Here, the judge decided that
    evidence of the circumstances of the mother's discharge from the
    treatment program was an important component of his fitness
    determination, and concluded that, "because the underlying
    allegations involve a significant repetitive history of
    substance abuse and her failure to engage in services that would
    remedy the circumstances that led to the filing of this care and
    protection [petition], I have to find that there is good cause
    for a disclosure of the records."   Thus, both the public
    interest and the need for the judge to learn the circumstances
    12Courts of other jurisdictions have reached similar
    conclusions when applying 42 U.S.C. § 290dd-2 to cases involving
    children's welfare. See Doe v. Daviess County Div. of Children
    & Family Servs., 
    669 N.E.2d 192
    , 195 (Ind. Ct. App. 1996)
    (mother's right to nondisclosure "must give way before the duty
    of the court to prevent harm and to safeguard . . . the child");
    Matter of Baby X, 
    97 Mich. App. 111
    , 120 (1980) ("[I]n neglect
    proceedings confidentiality must give way to the best interests
    of the child"). The Doe and Baby X opinions refer to the
    statute prior to the 1992 reorganization and renumbering. See
    note 8, supra.
    14
    of the mother's program discharge weigh heavily in favor of
    disclosure.
    In contrast, any risk of injury to the mother, to the
    physician-patient relationship, and to the treatment program, is
    negligible.   As the judge noted, the private nature of a
    Juvenile Court proceeding, and the fact that the records of the
    proceedings below are impounded and therefore not open to
    indiscriminate public inspection, minimizes the likelihood of
    the mother's treatment becoming a matter of public record.      See
    G. L. c. 119, § 38; G. L. c. 210, § 5C.   In addition, any impact
    on the mother's physician-patient relationship with the program
    is, at best, minimal because her treatment at that program had
    already ended by the time the department subpoenaed her records.
    Nor can she credibly contend that releasing the limited
    information derived from her records deterred her from seeking
    treatment elsewhere, since she subsequently identified a
    different program in which she intended to enroll.   Finally, the
    mother herself opened the door to an exploration of her program
    compliance by testifying that she was in substantial compliance
    with its rules.   And, as counsel for the parties agreed, the
    program manager's narrowly focused affidavit explaining the
    reasons for her discharge was preferable to the release of any
    of her treatment records.   This limited disclosure, combined
    with the program's zealous protection of its patients' rights in
    15
    contesting the department's subpoena, minimizes any risk of
    injury to the program.
    Because the interests of the children in being free from
    abuse and neglect substantially outweigh any unlikely injury to
    the mother from this limited disclosure of confidential
    information, we conclude that the judge had good cause to order
    the program manager to disclose by affidavit the reasons for the
    mother's discharge from her treatment program, in accordance
    with 42 U.S.C § 290dd-2.13       See Adoption of Virgil, 93 Mass. App.
    Ct.        ,      (2018).
    2.       Determination of unfitness and termination of parental
    rights.        The mother also argues that the judge erred in his
    unfitness conclusion because he failed to connect the unfitness
    finding to any risk of harm to the children.        We review the
    decision of the judge to determine whether there was any abuse
    of discretion or error of law.        Adoption of Hugo, 
    428 Mass. 219
    ,
    225 (1998), cert. denied sub nom. Hugo P. v. George P., 
    526 U.S. 1134
     (1999).       We review findings of fact under the familiar
    "clearly erroneous" standard.       See Adoption of Adam, 
    23 Mass. App. Ct. 922
    , 924 (1986); Adoption of Jacques, 82 Mass. App. Ct.
    Therefore, the mother's contention that the judge was
    13
    clearly erroneous in finding that her discharge from the program
    was based on "violations of policy" must fail. If the judge
    properly admitted the affidavit, there was evidence to support
    the judge's finding.
    16
    601, 606-607 (2012).   In doing so, we grant substantial
    deference to the judge's decision, because a "judge who hears
    the evidence, observes the parties, and is most familiar with
    the circumstances remains in the best position to make the
    judgment [regarding fitness]."    Guardianship of Estelle, 
    70 Mass. App. Ct. 575
    , 579 (2007).
    "The interest of parents in their relationship with their
    children [is] fundamental [and] constitutionally protected."
    Petition of the Dept. of Pub. Welfare to Dispense with Consent
    to Adoption, 
    383 Mass. 573
    , 587 (1981) (quotation omitted).      A
    State's intervention into a family is justified only if the
    parents are "shown to have grievous shortcomings or handicaps
    that would put the child's welfare in the family milieu much at
    hazard."    Petition of the New England Home for Little Wanderers
    to Dispense with Consent to Adoption, 
    367 Mass. 631
    , 646 (1975).
    "[T]he term 'unfitness' signifies something more than a
    standard by which we measure the limits of acceptable parental
    conduct[; it] is a standard by which we measure the
    circumstances within the family as they affect the child's
    welfare."   Petition of the Dept. of Pub. Welfare to Dispense
    with Consent to Adoption, 
    383 Mass. at 589
    .    It requires careful
    consideration, reflecting the unique facts present in each case,
    of the capacity of the parents to care for the child.      See
    Freeman v. Chaplic, 
    388 Mass. 398
    , 405 (1983).   The department
    17
    bears the burden of proving parental unfitness by clear and
    convincing evidence.14   Adoption of Lorna, 
    46 Mass. App. Ct. 134
    ,
    139 (1999).
    The welfare of the child is the most important
    consideration when determining parental fitness.     See Petition
    of the Dept. of Pub. Welfare to Dispense with Consent to
    Adoption, 
    383 Mass. at 589
    .     "[T]he critical question is whether
    the natural parents are currently fit to further the welfare and
    best interests of the child."    Bezio v. Patenaude, 
    381 Mass. 563
    , 576 (1980).   The parental unfitness test and the best
    interests of the child test are not mutually exclusive, but
    rather reflect different degrees of emphasis on the same
    factors.   See Adoption of Kimberly, 
    414 Mass. 526
    , 528 (1993).
    We disagree with the mother's contention that the judge's
    findings of fact do not support his determination that she is
    unfit, and that he failed to connect his findings regarding her
    unfitness to any risk of harm to the children.     On the contrary,
    the judge explicitly connected his findings to the risk of harm
    to the children should they be returned to her custody.
    Specifically, the judge found that "[the mother] has also failed
    to adequately address the domestic violence in the home or
    14Clear and convincing evidence is evidence that is
    "strong, positive and free from doubt." Stone v. Essex County
    Newspapers, Inc., 
    367 Mass. 849
    , 871 (1975) (quotation omitted).
    18
    complete a domestic violence program."   He found that she "was
    involved in several abusive relationships and suffered vicious
    beatings at the hands of her abusers."   However, despite vowing
    to end her abusive relationships and even obtaining a
    restraining order against Adam's father, she continued to
    associate with him on numerous occasions.   Finding that "[t]here
    is no evidence that [the mother] completed any domestic violence
    program or would not repeat this vicious cycle again," the judge
    concluded, "[the mother's] inability to extricate herself from
    these abusive relationships bears on her ability to protect the
    subject children from the grievous type of harm."   See Adoption
    of Zak, 
    87 Mass. App. Ct. 540
    , 543 (2015), quoting from Custody
    of Vaughn, 
    422 Mass. 590
    , 595, 599 (2015) ("[W]itnessing
    domestic violence, as well as being one of its victims, has a
    profound impact on children. . . .   [A] child who has been
    either the victim or the spectator of such abuse suffers a
    distinctly grievous kind of harm").15
    15The mother's argument that any domestic violence occurred
    when the children were at school, and thus was not witnessed by
    or directed toward them, is unpersuasive. A parent's
    willingness to ignore or minimize abusive behavior can be an
    indicator of unfitness, regardless of whether the child is at
    risk of abuse or witnessing abuse. See Adoption of Anton, 
    72 Mass. App. Ct. 667
    , 674-675 (2008) (mother's refusal to end
    relationship with man convicted of child sexual abuse properly
    considered by judge despite no evidence that subject child was
    at risk of abuse).
    19
    With regard to drug abuse, the judge concluded that "[the
    mother] has longstanding addiction issues and has relapsed
    several times prior to and since the initiation of these
    petitions."   He also found that "[i]n over two years since
    [Adam] has been removed from her custody, [the mother] has not
    been able to complete a substance abuse program," and that when
    she did enroll in such a program, the program terminated her for
    noncompliance after only ten weeks.    The judge did not credit
    the mother's testimony that she had been drug-free since 2003
    and that she only started abusing drugs again once the
    department removed the children from her care.    That testimony
    conflicted with evidence of positive drug tests in December of
    2013 and January of 2014, as well as an incident in September of
    2015 when police found her incoherent with "track marks" on her
    arms.   Finally, the judge noted that the mother failed to
    complete a substance abuse treatment program, having enrolled in
    a program shortly before trial some two years after the removal
    of the children.    He concluded that "[the mother] has not taken
    action to remedy . . . her repeated drug use . . . and is unable
    to see how these issues negatively [a]ffect the subject
    children. . . .    [The m]other has clearly demonstrated an
    enduring inability to parent the subject child[ren]."
    As to Adam, the judge again connected his findings to the
    risk of harm to the child.   Specifically, he found that "[Adam]
    20
    has substantial medical and emotional needs due to his premature
    birth and genetic condition."   The judge also found that "[the
    mother] does not fully understand the scope of his medical
    issues as she did not think that it was important to meet with
    his dietician[16] or obtain the necessary feeding implements and
    stated to the court investigator that the [d]epartment was
    making it seem like he was sicker than he was."   He concluded,
    "[the mother] has little understanding of [the child's]
    substantial medical issues, and developmental delays and is
    unwilling and/or unable to provide the constant supervision and
    consistency for his social, emotional, and physical well-being."
    The record well supports these findings.   See Adoption of
    Oliver, 
    28 Mass. App. Ct. 620
    , 625-626 (1990) (parental
    unfitness can be established where child has substantial needs
    16The mother takes issue with this finding because the
    judge relied on a statement contained in a G. L. c. 119, § 51A,
    report (51A report), admitted during Adam's temporary custody
    hearing, but not admitted at trial. Without expressing an
    opinion on the propriety of the judge's decision to consider a
    51A report that was not admitted in evidence, we note that there
    is ample evidence in the record from which the judge could infer
    that the mother did not take Adam's medical issues seriously.
    Specifically, the judge found that the mother (1) did not appear
    for the initial appointment with the hospital, (2) was late to
    the rescheduled appointment and did not bring the necessary
    bottle nipples, (3) had infrequent and sporadic visits with Adam
    at the hospital, (4) failed to provide the prescription for
    Adam's seizure medication, and (5) told an investigator that
    Adam was not sickly and that the department made him out to be
    sicker than he actually was. The mother does not contest these
    findings.
    21
    requiring extraordinary attentiveness from caregiver and where
    parent has little or no understanding of those needs, or
    willingness or ability to meet them); Petitions of the Dept. of
    Social Servs. to Dispense with Consent to Adoption, 
    389 Mass. 793
    , 799-800 (1983) (specialized needs of particular child
    considered with parent's character, temperament, capacity, or
    conduct may clearly establish parental unfitness).
    Thus, we conclude that the record is replete with evidence
    supporting the judge's unfitness determination.   The judge's
    findings are detailed and thorough, and show that he gave the
    case his close attention.   See Custody of a Minor (No. 1), 
    377 Mass. 876
    , 886 (1979).   The record belies the mother's argument
    that the judge's findings are insufficient to support his
    conclusions.   We think it plain that the mother simply views the
    evidence differently from how the judge viewed it.   The judge is
    not required to view the evidence from the parent's perspective.
    See Care & Protection of Olga, 
    57 Mass. App. Ct. 821
    , 824 n.3
    (2003), quoting from Anderson v. Bessemer City, 
    470 U.S. 564
    ,
    573-574 (1985) ("Where there are two permissible views of the
    evidence, the factfinder's choice between them cannot be clearly
    erroneous").
    After a determination of unfitness, a "judge must determine
    whether the parent's unfitness is such that it would be in the
    child[ren]'s best interests to end all legal relations between
    22
    parent and child[ren]."   Adoption of Nancy, 
    443 Mass. 512
    , 515
    (2005).   In order to terminate a parent's parental rights, the
    unfitness element must be so probative and persuasive that it
    can serve as a predicate for finding that the unfitness will
    continue undiminished into the future, affecting the welfare of
    the child.   See Adoption of Carlos, 
    413 Mass. 339
    , 350 (1992).
    While consideration of the reasonable likelihood that a parent's
    unfitness at the time of trial may only be temporary is
    appropriate, such a prediction must rely "upon credible evidence
    rather than mere hypothesis or faint hope."    Adoption of Serge,
    
    52 Mass. App. Ct. 1
    , 7 (2001) (quotation omitted).    See Adoption
    of Carlos, supra.17
    As noted supra, the judge's finding that the mother is
    currently unfit was clearly and convincingly supported by the
    evidence presented at trial.   The judge found, "[the mother] has
    longstanding issues with drug abuse and domestic violence which
    she has not adequately addressed. . . .     She has not taken
    action to remedy either her repeated drug use or repeated
    abusive relationships and is unable to see how these issues
    negatively [a]ffect the subject children.     She remains
    17"'[A] condition which is reasonably likely to continue
    for a prolonged indeterminate period, such as alcohol or drug
    addiction . . . [that] makes the parent . . . unlikely to
    provide minimally acceptable care of the child' is not a
    temporary condition." Adoption of Elena, 
    446 Mass. 24
    , 31
    (2006), quoting from G. L. c. 210, § 3(c)(xii).
    23
    noncompliant with several service plan tasks."     Based on these
    findings, the judge concluded that the mother remains unfit to
    care for the children and that her unfitness is likely to
    continue indefinitely.    There was no error in the judge's
    conclusions.
    In this case, the judge made meticulous findings, amply
    supported by the record, supporting his conclusion that the
    mother's long-standing substance abuse and her inability to
    extricate herself from violent relationships were unlikely to be
    resolved in the future.    In addition, the record supports the
    judge's conclusion that the mother is unable to provide adequate
    medical care for Adam, for whom she has never been the primary
    caregiver.   The judge noted in his findings that Adam's
    preadoptive parents, with whom he has lived since his hospital
    discharge, have provided satisfactory care for the child, and
    that notwithstanding his medical challenges, he continues to
    make improvements.   The judge also found that Lisette has made
    significant improvements since her removal from the mother's
    custody, especially improving in school and with her behavioral
    issues.   It has now been more than two years since the
    children's placement in the department's custody.    At some
    point, the judge must say "enough," and act in the best
    interests of the children.    Adoption of Nancy, 443 Mass. at 517
    ("[C]hildren deserve permanence and stability").    See Adoption
    24
    of Ilona, 
    459 Mass. 53
    , 60 (2011) ("Because childhood is
    fleeting, a parent's unfitness is not temporary if it is
    reasonably likely to continue for a prolonged or indeterminate
    period").
    Conclusion.   For the reasons stated, there was no error in
    the termination of the mother's parental rights.
    Decrees affirmed.