I believe things have changed considerably since you were in a program, RMA, Aspen Ranch does not subject the kids to intense therapy 24/7. There is a very structured program which has been developed to keep the kids busy and focused allowing time for school, organized activites and personal time. If Nigels son was home I dont believe he would be seeing his therapist much more than he is at the Ranch so that is a wash. The advantage of the Ranch is the structure, consistency and safe environment with constant oversight which is hard to duplicate at home.
You mentioned that Nigel is concerned that his son sees the staff more than he sees his therapist and reading back I didn’t see where Nigel wrote that. I dont think a parent has the expectation that the child will see a therapist 24/7. Some kids dont see one at all unless the parents request it and some programs have the parents pay the therapists directly and set up the appointments.
You may believe things have changed, but I don't. The people who created Aspen are the same people who created RMA. That they might have changed things slightly over the years since Mel Wasserman died and these people got to run the show is merely cosmetic. Aspen and RMA are hardly apples and oranges. RMA did not subject us to 24/7 therapy either. Obviously we slept. We also had a "structured program" developed to keep us busy, and focused and allowing time for school, organized activities and personal time. But during waking hours, all of that was really part of the therapy program they concocted.
If Nigel's son was at home and not seeing a therapist constantly, that would be a good thing. You shouldn't see a therapist constantly. A person needs down time. And you are suggesting that only the Ranch can provide a safe environment that has oversight and structure and that Nigel and his wife are not capable of creating this at home. I believe Nigel to be capable of that. However everything relies more on the son's willingness. And Nigel is discussing visiting with his son where he can discuss his son's willingness to create their own program, outside of Aspen where the son will be willing to do the work he needs to help himself. Without the son's willingness to do something, Aspen, home...none of it will work. But I think Nigel, with the proper advice from real professionals can approach his son with a solid plan to create a foundation for the son to succeed. Outside of Aspen.
And where I saw Nigel saying he is concerned that his son is not seeing a therapist often enough and the staff more so, is based on the comments made by people like you who say therapists are not providing much treatment if any, depending on the structure and arrangement. Nigel would not be here if he thought the program was doing all it could. That he is concerned by the things his son has said to him, considering the option of taking his son home and feeling that the therapists their son saw before arriving at Aspen could be brought back in to take back over their son's treatment of his depression. Unless Aspen is treating that depression, which I doubt, Nigel is wasting his money. His son needs treatment for depression, under the guidance of a real professional therapist, and to make that work better his son needs his mother and father and any other family readily involved in that process. Not isolation and occasional contact. Nigel can create a far more nurturing and structured environment at home to help his son, with a professional therapist part of this process.
I do not feel that Aspen is capable of helping the son because Aspen, by its own admission, isn't really treating anyone. And someone with depression needs treatment. With depression gone, the son's thought of suicide will fade away, his feelings of low self-worth will pass. And by Nigel and the mother intimately involved in helping their son with his depression, the family will grow closer and the threats of violence a thing of the past. Aspen is not needed here and further, Aspen is actually a hindering factor in the son getting better and growing now rather than later. How long does Aspen think they will need to treat the son's depression? Oh wait, Aspen doesn't treat people...