I'm not sure if we agree.
I don't think I'm on board with your view of 'success'. Why would 'number of years in college' be listed. Who has determined that college is necessary for success, IF success is defined as peace and contentment with self and others?
This appears to be at least one significant factor in parents incarcerating their kids. They also put college education under the Success heading and when their kid veers off that pre-determined path, off they go to RTC. Would it be the end of the world if a kid chose not to attend college?
I also would not necessarily catagorize 'living back at home' unsuccessful- particularly in the current economy. Not sure what you're implying.
As to the lie detector. I'm very curious how this would work when someone has had their thoughts modified. For instance, my son, when asked to list abuses for discovery, would say "so and so happened but that wasn't abuse, it was a consequence". Well, it was abuse, by the most conservative definition. But he had been conditioned/trained to think of it as normal and appropriate. I don't know how that would work, but would be curious to see how the detector responded. Would it show him to be lying if he'd been led to believe that the abuses he endured were normal and not abuse. Now that's a study I'd be interested in seeing.
I understand that it's important to you to compare the deaths/accidents/abuse in RTCs to those in other social institutions, but I consider it a moot point. Parents pay upwards to 60, 70K a year to put their kid in a 'therapeutic' bubble, to isolate and protect them from the risks of living in the real world with all its inherent dangers; while having their behavior, thoughts, feelings modified. I'd say for that kind of money, there shouldn't be even one death, minimal injuries that are not associated with risky activities the child is forced to participate in, and certainly no abuse.
Injuries and abuse aside, there were 14+ deaths in RTCs in 2000- right up there with appendicitis. Too many. I do have to wonder how many of those kids would be dead today if they hadn't been placed outside their homes. That is impossible to ascertain with any study or survey for the obvious reason that they are dead.... and RTCs will remain a risk parents take with their kids life in their quest for protection, perfection and success- as they define it.