I think one of the greatest changes has been in the marketing; more specifically, in both the breadth of the target audience as well as greater sophistication in the means and the message of their advertising. Why, some of these folks even have their very own damage control experts!
They have improved in leaps and bound in marketing and defining their target audience, I agree, but the biggest changes, as I see it, is that these places are not cults anymore. They have predetermined goals for each child and an expected graduation date, doing away with fences and monitored phone calls. Each child has access to a therapist who is paid directly by the parents and not thru the school. The therapists talk directly with the childs therapist at home etc., etc.….Straight (and programs like them) never had this.
Those "expected graduation dates" can be remarkably flexible now, eh? And, why bother with putting up a fence when you can just
confiscate a kid's shoes to prevent them from running away?
And, as to those "unmonitored" phone calls? Let's just try hanging that flexible graduation date over a kid's head for
one stark disincentive for frank speech, lol. Folks have experienced many more such stifling factors, too numerous to mention here, but mentioned in many another thread...
And those therapists? They're not exactly "imported" by the parents. They work
for the program or under
some arrangement with the program. Depending on the facility, therapeutic services may or may not be a part of the package, but the therapists are almost never completely separate from the program's philosophy.
I guess I really don't get just how you claim these places are "not cults anymore?"
Moreover, as these programs learn how to really capitalize on cultural trends and drifts, not to mention "cooperation" from the pharmaceutical and correction industries, they might even find a way to pathologize the entirety of adolescence, rather than just the more so-called inconvenient aspects of it. I imagine the possibilities are endless, for those crafty and immoral enough!
The possibilities "are" endless. I think the more studies that keep coming out showing the effectiveness of these places the better people will feel about the safety of the industry as a whole and as they better hone their acceptance criteria and predicting which children will better benefit from each program the success rates will just continue to rise.
Yep! Let's not forget those unassailable "industry-sponsored" studies. Why muddy up parents' consciences with
real and unbiased data on trauma when you can manufacture yer own! Why, with greater fine-tuning of the marketing paradigm, and experience in the art of the press release, I bet these programs can even find a way to assess success rates prior to enrollment! :rofl: