Fact Sheet: Children in Residential Treatment Centers
I. Tens of thousands of children with mental
health needs are being placed in expensive, inappropriate and often dangerous
institutions.
The number of children
placed in residential treatment centers (or RTCs)[1] is growing exponentially.[2] These modern-day orphanages now house more than
50,000 children nationwide.[3] Children are packed off to RTCs, often sent by
officials they have never met, who have probably never spoken to their
parents, teachers or social workers.[4] Once placed, these kids may have no meaningful
contact with their families or friends for up to two years.[5] And, despite many documented cases of neglect
and physical and sexual abuse, monitoring is inadequate to ensure that
children are safe, healthy and receiving proper services in RTCs.[6] By funneling children with mental illnesses into
the RTC system, states fail—at enormous cost—to provide more effective
community-based mental health services.[7]
A. RTC placements are often inappropriate.
RTCs are among the most restrictive mental health
services and, as such, should be reserved for children whose dangerous
behavior cannot be controlled except in a secure setting.[8] Too
often, however, child-serving bureaucracies hastily place children in RTCs
because they have not made more appropriate community-based services available.[9] Parents
who are desperate to meet their kids’
needs often turn to RTCs because they lack viable alternatives.[10]
To make placement decisions, families in crisis
and overburdened social workers rely on the institutions’ glossy flyers and
professional websites with testimonials of saved children.[11] But all RTCs are not alike.[12] Local, state and national exposés and litigation
“regarding the quality of care in residential treatment centers have shown
that some programs promise high-quality treatment but deliver low-quality
custodial care.”[13] As
a result, parents and state officials play a dangerous game of Russian
roulette as they decide where to place children,
because little public information is available about the RTCs, which are
under-regulated and under-supervised.
To make it worse, far too many children are placed
at great distance from their homes. For example, most District of Columbia
children in RTCs are placed outside the District—many as far away as Utah
and Minnesota.[14] Many
families, especially those with limited means, find it impossible to have
any meaningful visitation with their children.
B. Evidence is limited on the effectiveness of RTCs.
Children frequently arrive at RTCs traumatized by
the process that delivered them there. They are often forcibly removed from
their homes in the middle of the night by “escort companies.”[15] Other
times, children are placed in RTCs not by their parents or doctors, but
by overburdened child-serving state agencies,
who know little about the children’s individual needs.[16]
Even more appalling, many children’s conditions
do not improve at all while at the RTC.[17] In fact, there is little evidence that placing
children in RTCs has any positive impact at all on their mental health state[18] and any gains made during a stay in an RTC quickly
disappear upon discharge, creating a cycle where children return again and
again to RTCs.[19]
There are many reasons why RTCs fail to deliver
the results they promise, but most center on the type of services provided,
the environment they are provided in and the lack of family involvement.
First, the reality of what occurs within an RTC
is often quite different from the highly individualized, highly structured
programs that are advertised. The RTCs often provide less intense services
and the staff are often under-trained.[20] Children
spend much of their day with staff who are
not much more qualified than the average parent and they spend less time
face-to-face with psychiatrists than they would if they were being served
in appropriate community settings.[21]
The environment is also problematic because children
in RTCs enter a situation where their only peers are other troubled children—a
major risk factor for later behavioral problems.[22] Research has demonstrated that some children
learn antisocial or bizarre behavior from intensive exposure to other disturbed
children.[23]
Children are usually far from home in RTCs, often
out-of-state.[24] Removed from their families and natural support
systems, they are unable to draw upon the strengths of their communities
and their communities are unable to contribute to their treatment. Few children
thrive when they are hundreds or thousands of miles from their parents, friends,
grandparents and teachers. Few can flourish without the guidance of consistent
parenting. Yet, we expect that our most vulnerable and troubled youth will
miraculously turn around in just such a situation. Instead, this isolation
further reduces the efficacy of treatment and increases its cost.[25]
The fact that children and their families are far
from one another creates a host of problems. For one, it makes family therapy
difficult or impossible. As a result, when children leave the RTC, they return
to an environment that has not changed. Also, because the RTC environment
is inherently artificial—children are not asked to negotiate the obstacles
that occur within their family setting or deal with the difficulties that
trigger their behaviors in their neighborhoods or schools—the child does
not gain new skills to better negotiate life outside of an institution. As
a result, neither the children nor their parents learn better ways to overcome
the obstacles that led to the RTC placement. Without family involvement,
successes are limited.[26]
Among the rare children who are able to overcome
these obstacles, few can sustain the gains they have made. In one study,
nearly 50% of children were readmitted to an RTC, and 75% were either renstitutionalized
or arrested.[27]
C. Children suffer
because there is no watchdog.
The RTC industry is largely
unregulated.[28] RTCs need only report major unusual incidents
(or MUIs), but the interpretation of what constitutes an MUI and the reporting
requirements vary widely.[29] Some RTCs fail to report MUIs at all—with little
consequence.[30] Vulnerable
kids are placed far from home where parents, social workers, or the state
can offer little oversight or protection. Worse,
many of the facilities limit children’s ability to have contact with
their parents for extended periods, further restricting the parents’
ability
to monitor the facilities.[31]
D. Children are abused in RTCs.
Children placed in RTCs
have been sexually and physically abused, restrained for hours, over-medicated
and subject to militaristic punishments; some have died.[32] The
following are just a few documented examples of tragic occurrences at RTCs:
-
Medication
is often used (and overused) to control behavior.[33] Children
have been permanently disfigured because of over-medication.[34]
-
In
some programs, the children’s shoes are confiscated to keep them from running
away.[35]
-
There
have been reports of behavioral ‘therapies’ being misused. As one author
noted, “Such therapies do little more than systematically punish children,
all under the guise of treatment . . . .”[36]
-
Sexual
abuse by staff members and other residents is all too frequent.[37] In
one case, a 13-year old girl performed sexual favors for staff members
in return for snacks and carryout food.[38] At one RTC, four boys were
accused of trying to sodomize another with a cucumber.[39] At
another, a 19-year-old woman was charged with sodomizing a 14-year-old
girl.[40]
-
Physical
abuse is also too frequent an occurrence. For example, a 13-year-old boy
was forced against a wall and slammed to the floor by employees of an RTC.[41]
-
Children
are often restrained—sometimes for hours on end. The overuse of restraint
has resulted in child deaths.[42]
E. Tragic outcomes at great public expense.
RTCs have grown to a billion-dollar, largely private industry.[43] Residential
treatment care is exorbitantly expensive—costing up to $700 per child per
day.[44] Annual
costs can exceed $120,000.[45] Most of the time, the public foots the bill for
these services.[46] In fact, nearly one fourth of the national outlay
on child mental health is spent on care in these settings.[47]
II. Other Interventions Work Better
for Less
Home- and community-based services are much more therapeutically effective
than institutional services, and are also markedly more cost-efficient. As
the Surgeon General reported, “the most convincing evidence of effectiveness
is for home-based services and therapeutic foster care” and not for RTCs.[48] A
comprehensive system of care would dramatically reduce the number of children
in RTCs.[49]
Community-based alternatives produce better short- and long-term results
and are less disruptive to children and families. These alternatives provide
intensive mental health treatment, mobilize community resources and help
children and their families develop effective coping mechanisms. Some models
endeavor to “wrap services around” the child, while others emphasize multi-systemic
therapy and crisis intervention. Randomized clinical trials found greater
declines in delinquency and behavioral problems, greater increases in functioning,
greater stability in housing placements and greater likelihood of permanent
placement.[50] In Milwaukee,
a wraparound project that has served over 700 youth involved in juvenile
justice has shown similar promise; use of residential treatment has declined
60%, use of psychiatric hospitalization has declined 80%, and average overall
care costs for target youth have dropped by one third.[51]
Notes
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