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Offline kirstin

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Aspen residential boarding schools
« on: April 20, 2010, 12:20:20 AM »
Aspen residential boarding schools

Our residential boarding schools and therapeutic programs provide students with the necessary structure and time to internalize positive change. Our boarding school and treatment programs last from six months to two years, allowing time for each child to experience a stable educational community. This fosters personal growth, and healthy self expression, inspires academic excellence, and teaches individual responsibility and service to others. Parents participate in quarterly seminars and family resolution conferences in order to build mutually respectful and responsible relationships. The major goal of all our boarding schools and residential programs is to realize true healthy growth and assist in the creation of a positive future for each student and their family. For international inquiries, click here.



Aspen Ranch - Loa, Utah

A licensed residential treatment center located in Loa, Utah the Aspen Ranch utilizes its nationally renown equine therapy program as one of its tools to help young people. The Ranch combines an academic structure with intensive therapeutic milieu to create positive change emotionally, as well as academically. The strong work ethic inherent on the Ranch is fundamental to adolescents 13-17.6 cultivating the characteristics of responsibility, discipline, respect and teamwork. Minimum length of stay is nine months. NPS-certified in the state of California.



SunHawk Adolescent Recovery Center - St. George, Utah

SunHawk Adolescent Recovery Center's teen residential treatment program and boarding school combines an intense clinical intervention with an accredited academic program. SunHawk treats struggling teens 13-17 with substance abuse problems. During our program, students progress through levels as they achieve specific academic and behavioral goals. Personal growth of students is encouraged through extensive therapeutic activities, which are under the direction of qualified clinical staff. SunHawk's comprehensive adolescent substance abuse treatment program is grounded in the Twelve Step philosophy and encourages community service, family involvement, and parental support throughout the process of achieving sobriety and sustaining recovery.



Oakley School - Oakley, Utah

Oakley School is a top college preparatory therapeutic boarding school that leads the country in providing sophisticated clinical support and a rigorous education for students preparing for a four year college experience.  Oakley focuses on a commitment to excellence and preparation for the future in four main areas of their lives:  academic excellence, emotional well-being, experiential education, and a productive student life.  A full curriculum includes Honors courses, and Advanced Placement classes. Clinical support, and the exploration of new passions and healthy coping skills are developed through experiential opportunities and in day to day dorm interactions.  At the Oakley School, teenagers excel in academics, acquire positive emotional communication and responsibility, and discover new strengths in physical adventures and community service.  



New Leaf Academy - Oregon

New Leaf Academy of Oregon is a private boarding school for girls (ages 10 to 14 upon admission) who have been struggling with issues related to controlling anger, following rules, regulating emotions and establishing and maintaining healthy relationships. At New Leaf Academy of Oregon, adolescent and pre-adolescent girls benefit from comprehensive care delivered in a personalized manner by highly trained professionals. New Leaf's teachers, counselors and other staff members are dedicated to helping all students develop the confidence, self-esteem, communication skills and sense of personal accountability that will allow them to pursue successful and satisfying futures.



Academy at Swift River - Cummington, Massachusetts

The Academy at Swift River (ASR) is a college preparatory therapeutic boarding school that enrolls adolescents ages 14-17.5. The mission of ASR is to help teens get back on track by restoring relationships, rediscovering academic success, and preparing them to meet the challenges of adolescence and young adulthood. ASR students benefit from our truly integrated team approach that allows for collaborative relationships between therapists, academic advisors and residential staff, this approach also gives students support, supervision and feedback in all areas of life at ASR. While students are engaged in the academic experience, they enjoy a full offering of athletic and extra-curricular activities, all while progressing in their growth through the unique Life Phase model based on the researched Stages of Change theory. The Academy at Swift River is located in Western Massachusetts and is surrounded by the scenic Berkshire Mountains.



Copper Canyon Academy - Rimrock, Arizona

Copper Canyon, in Rimrock, Arizona, is a boarding school for girls ages 13-17 that are in need of a structured therapeutic environment. The program offers a warm, nurturing environment that promotes emotional and academic growth for every student. The staff at Copper Canyon Academy is comprised of well-trained professionals working with adolescents. Copper Canyon Academy boarding school for girls assists families and gives them the reassurance that there is a wonderful future ahead for their child and family. We truly believe combining a warm, caring, structured environment allows students to progress to their fullest potential.



 Island View - Syracuse, Utah

Island View is a licensed residential treatment center that provides comprehensive services and programs for children 13 to 18 years of age. The program at Island View ensures a safe, predictable, organized and supportive environment where residents are taught and encouraged to overcome maladaptive and self-defeating behaviors and are challenged to acquire and practice pro-social behaviors. By taking a complete approach to healing, Island View has a proven track record of building and reshaping the lives of troubled youth. The academic program at Island View is fully accredited with the Utah Department of Education, the California Department of Education and the Northwest Association of Schools and Colleges.



Bromley Brook School - Manchester Center, Vermont

Bromley Brook boarding school for girls ages 14-18 educates young women to be tomorrow's leaders. Our mission is to teach each girl to recognize her own individual needs and to use her self-awareness to achieve more than she thought possible. At Bromley Brook, our faculty is hand-selected for their professional expertise and their boundless enthusiasm for working with girls. Beginning with the admissions process, this faculty collaborates with the student, her family, and referring professionals to create an Assessment-Based Individualized Learning Plan. What makes Bromley Brook School different from other girls' boarding schools? Our emphasis on assessment. Our comprehensive, research-based assessment allows us to create a truly individualized approach to your daughter's education and personal growth.



Southeast Journeys Academic Semester  - North Carolina

Southeast Journeys is an academic semester program specifically tailored to help children 13 -20 with Asperger's Syndrome, Non-verbal Learning Disorder, and High-Functioning Autism thrive in an experiential learning environment. Academics, social skills training, expert staff and peer support come together in a nurturing atmosphere to help children build self-confidence and gain more independence in school, within social interactions and in the community. It is a journey that enables students – who may have struggled in more traditional environments - to seek their full potential for life success.



Four Circles Recovery Center - North Carolina

Four Circles Recovery Center for older teens and young adults ages 18-28 is an innovative addictions, substance abuse and co-occuring mental health disorders treatment program that combines a traditional counseling setting with extensive wilderness experiences. Four Circles employs the most effective, cutting-edge clinical modalities with an underlying traditional 12-step philosophy to create the foundation for sustained recovery.

We are located in the beautiful Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina, just 15 minutes from Asheville, NC. The pristine wilderness of the Carolinas serves as a dramatic and beautiful backdrop for your recovery.



Stone Mountain School - Black Mountain, North Carolina

Stone Mountain is a therapeutic boarding school for boys ages 11-17 with ADHD and learning differences located in the mountain setting of a 100-acre campus in western North Carolina. Stone Mountain School offers numerous outdoor activities that have both a recreation and therapeutic benefit. The beautiful yet rustic surrounding serves as an experiential classroom where the natural and logical consequences of daily living are clear and understood. The program offers group therapy and academics through an adventure-based experiential model. Stone Mountain School creates a caring yet highly structured community by limiting the living and academic group size. Staff teaches and mentor basic living skills while implementing the Stage System of Personal Development that is at the core of assisting young men toward responsible, self-managing behavior.



New Leaf Academy - North Carolina

New Leaf Academy of North Carolina, a private boarding school for girls between the ages of 10 and 14, provides both a superior education and comprehensive counseling support to students whose personal and academic struggles have prevented them from achieving to their true potential. Housed on 68 stunning acres amid North Carolina's majestic Blue Ridge Mountains, New Life Academy of North Carolina offers a nurturing and supportive environment in which struggling adolescent and pre-adolescent girls can improve their academic performance, develop a healthy sense of personal responsibility, overcome problems related to defiance and anger control, and increase their ability to establish and maintain healthy relationships.



Turn About Ranch - Escalante, Utah

Turn-About Ranch is a short-term, high-impact therapy program on a working ranch that emphasizes family values and relationships. This co-ed program is located on a cattle ranch in Escalante, Utah and accepts students between the ages of 13 to 18. Licensed as a residential treatment center, Turn-About Ranch has 30 students on campus and offers education and treatment with a Christian-based philosophy.



NorthStar Center - Bend, Oregon

A young-adult transitional-living program specializing in assisting young adults ages 17.5-24 in early recovery with high school completion, college-prep and college-level courses. Located in the small college and resort community of Bend, Oregon, all students receive personal academic assistance, individual and group counseling, and ongoing support in becoming a responsible young adult. Achieving progressive independence to self-reliance is a major focus for all students. The program length is one year.



Youth Care Inc. - Salt Lake City, Utah

A residential treatment center for teens located in a suburb of Salt Lake City, Utah, Youth Care Inc. is a companion program to Pine Ridge Academy. Youth Care Inc provides individualized care in a family oriented environment. Enrollment is limited to 14 students between the ages of 11-18. Youth Care Inc. provides a therapeutic environment for both mental health and chemical dependency diagnosis. Accreditation is by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations making Youth Care Inc. a preferred provider for many insurance companies.



Camp Huntington  - High Falls, New York

Special Needs: Autism, Asperger's, Cognitive Impairment, Developmental Disabilities, ADD/HD, Learning Disabilities and many other special needs.

Camp Huntington offers co-ed, residential, summer camps for children and young adults who have special needs such as Autism Spectrum Disorder, Pervasive Developmental Disabilities, and cognitive impairment. Our program is designed to maximize a child's potential and develop their strengths and hidden abilities. We offer a unique program approach we've developed: Adaptive Therapeutic Recreation. Your child will enjoy the fun-filled days of summer camp while learning practical life skills.

Visit the Camp Huntington website to learn about the many special needs we meet at our summer camps.



Pine Ridge Academy - Salt Lake City, Utah

A residential treatment center and boarding school for adolescents between the ages of 11 to 18. Located in suburb of Salt Lake City, Utah, Pine Ridge Academy accepts students who are experiencing emotional/behavioral or academic difficulties. Enrollment is limited to 14 students who reside in a nurturing environment designed to model a home and family-like setting. Programming includes therapy, academics, and recreational activities.



The Aspen Institute for Behavioral Assessment  - Syracuse, Utah

Sometimes, a teenager presents a challenging and often perplexing picture for their parents. Other professionals have been unable to diagnosis their problems and therefore create a treatment plan. Subsequently, their future remains uncertain. The Aspen Institute for Behavioral Assessment is a unique resource by bringing clarity of diagnosis and optimal intervention options. We conduct all of the assessments necessary to gather and assemble a treatment plan and provide recommendations regarding the best possible follow-up care for adolescents relative to their diagnostic picture.
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »

Offline Oscar

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Re: Aspen residential boarding schools
« Reply #1 on: April 20, 2010, 12:42:36 AM »
Fornits Wiki entries:

Aspen Ranch
Sunhawk Academy
Oakley School
New Leaf Academy
Academy at Swift River
Copper Canyon Academy
Island View
Bromley Brook School
We have no evidence that Southeast Journeys Academic Semester is a behavior modification program
Four Circles Recovery Center are for adults who can leave at any time and it outside the present target group on Fornits Wiki
Stone Mountain School
New Leaf Academy - see above
Turn About Ranch
NorthStar Center are for adults who can leave at any time and it outside the present target group on Fornits Wiki
Youth Care Inc.
We have no evidence that  Camp Huntington is a behavior modification program
Pine Ridge Academy
The Aspen Institute for Behavioral Assessment
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »

Offline Anne Bonney

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Re: Aspen residential boarding schools
« Reply #2 on: April 20, 2010, 10:48:39 AM »
http://www.nospank.net/bacon.htm

Tough Love Proves Too Tough: The Short Life and Hard Death of a Teenager
By Christopher Smith, FEATURE ARTICLE, June 10, 1996
Vol. 28 Issue. 11, HIGH COUNTRY NEWS, 119 Grand Avenue, PO Box 1090, Paonia, CO 81428

    PANGUITCH, Utah - What gnaws at Sally Bacon is that she never hugged her son good-bye when he was pulled from his bed one March morning two years ago and hauled off to a southern Utah wilderness program for misbehaving teenagers.

    Thirty days later, she got the chance. It came at a funeral home in Page, Ariz., where Aaron Bacon lay on a stainless steel table, a white sheet covering all but his face.

    "I went into the room and his face was unrecognizable," the Phoenix woman sobbed at a hearing in Utah last year. "He had these sunken cheeks, and his eyes, he looked like a skeleton, his hands were all bone. I ripped the sheet off." "'''He was literally bruised, black and blue, from the tip of his toes to the top of his head. He had sores between his legs, open sores. The bottoms of his feet, I don't know how anyone could have walked or hiked on them.

    "I began screaming, because something was terribly wrong."

    Sally Bacon will retell those memories to a rural Utah jury this fall, when the trial begins for seven employees of North Star, the company that led Aaron Bacon's last trip. The employees are charged with felony counts of neglecting and abusing Aaron, who apparently died from acute peritonitis - an ulcerous meltdown that gradually ate holes in his lower intestine. At issue is whether North Star officials should have recognized the boy's deteriorating health and could have prevented his death. It also has raised the question whether a federal crackdown is needed on so-called "wilderness therapy programs."

    Critics call them "hell camps;" satisfied parents call them the best thing that ever happened to their son or daughter. Companies take rebellious kids aged 12 to 18 into the backcountry for several weeks, teach them how to live off the land, and overcome their bad habits and bad attitudes. The assumption is, they then go home to Mom and Dad as responsible young adults.

    Aaron Bacon's journey to North Star began in Phoenix, where his parents had watched him spiral downward into regular drug use, with slipping grades, conflicts with gang members and bouts of depression. He smoked marijuana daily, and experimented with LSD, speed and hallucinogenic mushrooms. Aaron promised to quit drugs if he would be allowed to switch from private to public school, and his parents agreed. But when his grades and attitude continued to plummet, his parents showed him a brochure for a wilderness camp run by North Star. He tore it up in their faces.

    "I knew it would be rigorous, but he loved the outdoors, and I pictured him sitting around a campfire discussing issues with a therapist," Sally Bacon says. At wit's end, she and her husband decided to sign the enrollment contract, pay the $13,900 fee and send Aaron to North Star.

    Most wilderness camps for troubled teens cost $13,000 to $20,000 for an average nine-week stay in the sticks, with most of the fee payable by health insurance. In the West, the camps tend to be short, adventure-based programs, says Archie Buie, director of the National Association of Therapeutic Wilderness Camps. But if the youth reverts to his or her defiant ways after returning home, many programs offer a "parental satisfaction guarantee" that allows return visits to the program at no additional cost.

    Buie estimates there are 115 organizations around the country offering outdoor education experiences to troubled youths, either as private ventures, adjuncts to hospitals or as nonprofit foundations. Licensed and monitored by regulations that vary greatly from state to state - if they exist at all - the programs use a variety of treatment methods, from military boot-camp-style discipline to laissez-faire supervision.

    Teens enrolled in these programs are frequently taught basic outdoor survival skills, such as starting a fire without matches or making snares to capture small animals. Several companies adopt an American Indian theme, erecting "tipi camps' and teaching students to make pseudo Native American crafts. Employees of North Star Expeditions, for example, were only to be referred to by "Indian names' such as Two Crows, Horsehair and Wall Walker.

    Marketing their services in upscale magazines such as Southern Living and Sunset, programs like North Star cater to "troubled, defiant teenagers on a self-destructive path." They are known as non-adjudicated programs, to distinguish them from other private companies that are authorized to accept teen criminal offenders. Most minors in state-run programs are juvenile delinquents, whose care is paid for by taxpayers.

    For desperate parents whose teens seem out of control and "in with the wrong crowd," the concept of wilderness therapy sounds like a miracle cure, worth any price. The companies claim thousands of success stories of teens in turmoil whose lives and outlooks were dramatically altered by spending weeks trekking and soul-searching in rugged country, cut off from TV, telephone, family and friends who are "a bad influence."

    Critics say there is little evidence to show that wilderness therapy works. They cite one study in the mid-1980s, where the city of San Diego tracked the first 100 delinquent boys it sent through the VisionQuest program. After one year, 55 percent had been arrested again. After three years, 92 percent had been arrested again.

    Still, industry leaders like Buie insist that the concept works. "The job is to make sure it's done right," he says. Now, an increasing chorus of parents, civil rights attorneys and prosecutors say too many companies are doing it wrong, and that for some, results have proved deadly.

    The recently formed California activist group, Voices Forever Silenced, contends that more than a dozen youths have died nationwide since 1980 in various outdoor treatment or adventure camps. Three teens, including Aaron Bacon, died at teen camps in Utah between 1990 and 1994. The most recent death occurred last June, when 18-year-old Dawnne Takeuchi was thrown from a semi-truck near Pagosa Springs, Colo. Kimberly Stafford, the VisionQuest counselor driving the supply vehicle, was convicted of careless driving and was ordered to pay $270 in restitution.

    "How many more lives are going to be lost before we see the necessary changes needed?" asks Voices Forever Silenced co-founder Cathy Sutton of Ripon, Calif. One of the group's main fights has been to pressure Congress for federal regulation. Sutton's 15-year-old daughter Michelle died of dehydration six years ago while enrolled in the now-defunct Summit Quest program in Utah.

    So far, the group has had little success in convincing Congress to impose national standards on wilderness treatment programs. Buie and others in the industry continue to resist federal regulation, arguing instead that self-regulation is adequate. As one gesture toward that goal, Buie's association recently pledged never to use force to treat teens.

    But as scandals continue to hound the industry, some programs are disappearing. In Utah, for example, the number of wilderness therapy schools has shrunk from 13 in 1990, to three today.

    Even some wilderness therapy companies held up as model programs after Aaron Bacon's death have had their troubles. In January, six youths enrolled in Utah's nationally praised Aspen Achievement Academy bolted from their camp in Garfield County after some teens allegedly beat a counselor. They stole a walkie-talkie, which they used to fool authorities into believing they had taken hostages. Deputies later found the youths, but Garfield County Attorney Wallace Lee subsequently determined there was not enough information or evidence to charge the teens with any crime.

    The incident has raised concerns that future renegade youths from the Aspen Achievement Academy may assault tourists, hikers and recreationists who also frequent the public lands around Capitol Reef National Park.

    "There have been some concerns expressed to us by folks who want to know what areas Aspen kids are using," says Gary Hall of the Bureau of Land Management. The BLM is now considering whether to renew the academy's permit to use public lands for the therapy and survival programs for at-risk teens. "They are now on a six-month permit that runs through June, so we are doing an environmental assessment on the program and presenting that to the public for comment."

    Despite the number of deaths and mishaps, there has yet to be a criminal conviction against any operator of a teen wilderness therapy program. But if prosecutors can prove neglect and abuse of Aaron Bacon in a state district court this fall, employees of now-defunct North Star could well be the first to be convicted.

    The prosecution's evidence is stark: Aaron Bacon, a 5-foot-11-inch teen, began the course weighing 131 pounds. When he died 30 days later, he weighed 108 pounds. Investigators from the Garfield County Sheriff's Department and the Utah attorney general's office have found that during the last 20 days of his life, Aaron went without food for at least 11 days. He also went without a sleeping bag for 14 nights when the average overnight temperature was 32 degrees.

    Aaron's worsening condition is chronicled in his journal as well as the journals of other campers. He wrote about how his counselors laughed at him for losing control of his bowel movements. Another teen wrote that Aaron was starting to look "like a Jewish person in the concentration camps."

    Defense attorneys will argue in court that what while their clients may have shown poor judgment, they were not responsible for the death of Aaron Bacon. Most of the counselors say they believed Aaron was faking his illness to manipulate the group.

    "This was a tragedy," says defense attorney Floyd Holm. "Based on what we know now, it should not have happened. But for every tragedy, it does not follow there was a crime."

    The real crime, says Aaron's father, Bob Bacon, is that so many young people are dead. And no one will take responsibility.

    "The ignorance, arrogance, incompetence, callousness and greed of the people running these programs is proving repeatedly to be dangerous, abusive and even fatal," says Bacon. "The lessons are not being learned."

    Christopher Smith reports for the Salt Lake Tribune.
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »
traight, St. Pete, early 80s
AA is a cult http://www.orange-papers.org/orange-cult.html

The more boring a child is, the more the parents, when showing off the child, receive adulation for being good parents-- because they have a tame child-creature in their house.  ~~  Frank Zappa

Offline Anne Bonney

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Re: Aspen residential boarding schools
« Reply #3 on: April 20, 2010, 10:50:44 AM »
http://teenhelpindustry.info/youthcareutahoct07.asp

Four recent Utah deaths in treatment programs
Facility put on probation, but free to take new clients

By Kirsten Stewart

Salt Lake Tribune

October 13, 2007

A residential youth treatment center was cited on Friday for providing inadequate medical care to Brendan James Blum, a 14-year-old California boy who died at its Draper facility.

Utah licensers placed Youth Care of Utah on probation, requiring the center to, among other requirements, retool employee training. Youth Care was not fined and it is free to accept new clients, though no more than five every 30 days.

The disciplinary action was reached as part of a settlement between the facility and lawyers for the state Human Services Office of Licensing, which regulates Utah's teen-help industry.

Licensing director Ken Stettler said he hopes Friday's action shows the state takes its watchdog role seriously. It comes a day after criminal neglect charges were filed against two former Youth Care counselors in connection with Brendan's June 28 death.

It also coincides with a congressional probe into wilderness camps, which detailed thousands of cases of abuse nationwide since 1990. Of 10 deaths detailed in the federal report, five occurred in Utah.

The cases showed a pattern of lax government oversight and medical neglect, with counselors assuming the teens were making up their symptoms.

Brendan Blum's mother, Dana Blum, fears the same issues may have played a role in her son's death.

Blum said she "feels" for the employees at Youth Care, but said the facility should have been shut down, at least temporarily, and the owners held accountable.

"Nothing will bring Brendan back," said Blum. "But the bottom line is that when a parent makes a difficult decision to place their child in a treatment program, the management and caretakers have a responsibility to ensure their safety. There shouldn't be any tolerance for the death of a child."
Sent to bed

Blum said the coroner described her son's death as "violent and painful." An autopsy concluded that he died after his bowel twisted, cutting off the blood supply to his small intestine.

Brendan had vomited and been suffering diarrhea all night, according to police. Instead of phoning the on-call nurse, per Youth Care's policy, counselors treated the boy with an over-the-counter medicine and sent him to bed, said Draper police Sgt. Gerry Allred.

The next morning, Brendan, who had Asperger's syndrome, a form of autism, was found dead on his mattress.

The on-call nurse, who was later interviewed by police, said had she been consulted, she would have advised sending Brendan to the hospital, said Allred. The Utah State Medical Examiner said with medical intervention, the boy might have survived.
'Flu-like' symptoms

Youth Care officials maintain Brendan complained only of "flu-like" symptoms.

"We extend our deepest sympathies to the family, and we continue to work closely with Utah officials and law enforcement. But we are confident a criminal prosecution will be found unwarranted," said Kristen Hayes, spokeswoman for Aspen Education Group, which owns Youth Care.

Based in Cerritos, Calif., Aspen is a division of the CRC Health Group, which runs boarding schools, outdoor education programs and weight-loss camps.

For two decades, Youth Care has "delivered the highest standards of care," treating more than 1,300 children with behavioral and addiction problems last year, said Hayes. "All of Aspen's programs either meet or exceed state and national standards."
Aspen's record

Stettler confirmed Aspen's reputation, saying, "They've had a pretty spotless record."

Three of four recent deaths at Utah treatment programs, however, happened at Aspen facilities: Blum's and two suicides; one in July 2004 at Island View Academy in Syracuse, and another in April at Aspen Achievement Academy of Loa.

Stettler said the April suicide remains under investigation by law enforcement, but his own probe found Aspen wasn't at fault. The suicide at Island View happened before Aspen purchased the facility.

Blum said she thoroughly researched Youth Care and Aspen and was never told of the fatalities.

"If nothing else, I would like to see them create a searchable database so parents can review deaths and complaints and not have to rely on the subjective descriptions of licensors," said Blum.

The Web site of state licensors has contact information for facilities and shows whether their license is in good standing. But for more detailed information, parents need to phone regulators, who keep only paper files.
Sense of justice

Blum has "taken heat" for enrolling Brendan at Youth Care, but she says research shows behavioral modification programs can work for children with Asperger's.

"The real problem is there are not adequate community resources for kids with mental health problems," said Blum.

Brendan was "erratic and unpredictable," and started acting aggressively at age 3, said Blum. "There were no consequences that were meaningful to him. You could take away privileges with friends, TV, or PlayStation. It didn't matter."

Trips to her county mental health facility, school counselors and private therapists yielded no firm diagnosis.

It wasn't until Brendan turned 13 and got swept up in the juvenile justice system that doctors at a local university diagnosed him with Asperger's.

"They said he was a textbook case of high-functioning autism and should have been diagnosed at age 8," said Blum.

Brendan had a "fine-tuned sense of justice. As his mother, I feel I need to make sure Youth Care is held accountable," said Blum.

"These kids come from families that care about them. They're not just throwaway kids."

kstewart@sltrib.com
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »
traight, St. Pete, early 80s
AA is a cult http://www.orange-papers.org/orange-cult.html

The more boring a child is, the more the parents, when showing off the child, receive adulation for being good parents-- because they have a tame child-creature in their house.  ~~  Frank Zappa

Offline Anne Bonney

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Re: Aspen residential boarding schools
« Reply #4 on: April 20, 2010, 10:51:29 AM »
http://teenhelpindustry.info/youthcareutahoct07.asp

July 2, 2004

* Unnamed 16-year-old from Pennsylvania
* Island View Academy in Syracuse
* The teen hanged himself in a bathroom after excusing himself from a movie. Staff believed he was in his room, but the youth entered the bathroom from a private entrance in his room. When staff found him, they unsuccessfully tried to revive him. The facility was cited for minor issues and required to submit a plan of "corrective action."

July 16, 2006

* Elisa Santry, 16
* Colorado-based program Outward Bound
* The teen died on the 16th day of a 22-day backpacking and rafting expedition in a rugged Utah desert near Canyonlands National Park. She had been missing for five hours in 110-degree heat.

April 2007

* Unidentified 16-year-old
* Aspen Achievement Academy in Loa
* The teen attempted to hang himself with a shoelace from a tree at the ranch. He had asked to use the latrine, and when he didn't respond to prompts from staff, they went looking for him, found him unconscious and revived him. He died in a helicopter transport en route to the hospital. The case is still under investigation.

June 28, 2007

* Brendan James Blum, 14
* Youth Care of Utah in Draper
* Blum died of a bowel obstruction. That night, he lost bowel control, vomited and complained of stomach pain. He was given over-the-counter medicine. In violation of the center's policy, staff did not call the on-call nurse or seek emergency medical attention. Two counselors were fired and charged with child neglect. Utah regulators placed Youth Care of Utah on probation. It remains free to enroll new clients.
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »
traight, St. Pete, early 80s
AA is a cult http://www.orange-papers.org/orange-cult.html

The more boring a child is, the more the parents, when showing off the child, receive adulation for being good parents-- because they have a tame child-creature in their house.  ~~  Frank Zappa

Offline Whooter

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Re: Aspen residential boarding schools
« Reply #5 on: April 20, 2010, 11:08:07 AM »
Quote from: "Oscar"
We have no evidence that Southeast Journeys Academic Semester is a behavior modification program

They are pretty much all behavior modification programs otherwise they would not be affective.  Modifying a childs behavior is a constant process from birth until they move out and live on their own.  Then society and peer pressure take over.  Local public schools utilize positive reinforcement and punishment as their main technique to alter/modify behavior.  Programs typically use a stronger method primarily because the previous methods at home and in school have failed to be effective.



...
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »

Offline SUCK IT

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Re: Aspen residential boarding schools
« Reply #6 on: April 20, 2010, 02:45:11 PM »
All of you retards posting here have more in common than you think. You waste your time trying to convince other retards to take on your already retarded views. You are all retarded, yes, RETARDED
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »
one day at a time

Offline Anne Bonney

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Re: Aspen residential boarding schools
« Reply #7 on: April 20, 2010, 02:46:43 PM »
Quote from: "SUCK IT"
All of you retards posting here have more in common than you think. You waste your time trying to convince other retards to take on your already retarded views. You are all retarded, yes, RETARDED


There, there little one.  Feel better now?

 :ftard:  :rofl:  :rofl:
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »
traight, St. Pete, early 80s
AA is a cult http://www.orange-papers.org/orange-cult.html

The more boring a child is, the more the parents, when showing off the child, receive adulation for being good parents-- because they have a tame child-creature in their house.  ~~  Frank Zappa

Offline SUCK IT

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Re: Aspen residential boarding schools
« Reply #8 on: April 20, 2010, 02:47:39 PM »
Less than a minute this loser comes out of the woodwork to defend their retardness. Thanks for making my point you fucking loser!!!!!!!! LOL LOL LOL LOL LOL !
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »
one day at a time

Offline Anne Bonney

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Re: Aspen residential boarding schools
« Reply #9 on: April 20, 2010, 02:49:24 PM »
It's okay, little one.   Calm down.
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »
traight, St. Pete, early 80s
AA is a cult http://www.orange-papers.org/orange-cult.html

The more boring a child is, the more the parents, when showing off the child, receive adulation for being good parents-- because they have a tame child-creature in their house.  ~~  Frank Zappa