Teens in Crisis: How the Industry Serving Struggling Teens Helps and Hurts Our Kids

Teens in Crisis: How the Industry Serving Struggling Teens Helps and Hurts Our Kids

Teens in Crisis: How the Industry Serving Struggling Teens Helps and Hurts Our Kids

Teens in Crisis: How the Industry Serving Struggling Teens Helps and Hurts Our Kids

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Overview

In recent years a dizzying array of programs has emerged to meet the needs of struggling teens and their families-wilderness therapy programs, therapeutic boarding schools, alternative schools, mentoring and court diversion programs, independent living programs, and myriad day treatment and partial hospitalization services. Yet not all of these offerings employ mental health professionals or follow evidence-based treatment protocols. Some programs are licensed and accredited, but many are not, and some use techniques that are highly controversial, even abusive, resulting in injury and accidental death.

Frederic G. Reamer and Deborah H. Siegel have written the first scholarly book on this influential and controversial industry. They begin with a time line of Americans' changing attitudes toward challenging teens and the programs and schools established to handle this population. Then they summarize reputable organizations, including a selection of community-based and residential programs and schools, and provide brief descriptions of typical services. The authors candidly discuss a number of troubling scandals and tragedies, exposing the tragic consequences of emotionally and physically abusive practices, and recommend a range of empirically sound interventions for the clinical challenges of adolescent depression, bipolar disorder, anxiety, oppositional behavior, eating disorders, and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder. The authors conclude with a blueprint for reform and twenty "best practice" principles relating to harm prevention, program-based discipline, industry regulation, quality assurance, parental involvement, staff education, and after-care services.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780231144629
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Publication date: 10/17/2008
Pages: 192
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.10(h) x 0.60(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Frederic G. Reamer and Deborah H. Siegel are professors of social work at the School of Social Work, Rhode Island College, and authors of Finding Help for Struggling Teens: A Guide for Parents and the Professionals Who Work with Them.

Table of Contents

1. The Invention of "Troubled Teens": Evolution of an Industry
2. The Struggling-Teens Industry: A Complex Landscape
3. A Legacy of Scandals: Exposure of a Troubled Industry
4. Helping Struggling Teens: What Works?
5. A Blueprint for Reform: Best Practices for the Struggling-Teens Industry
Glossary
Notes
References
Index

What People are Saying About This

Karen M. Staller

By defining struggling teens broadly and considering programs and services comprehensively, Frederic G. Reamer and Deborah H. Siegel bring order to the otherwise bewildering array of existing specialized services. Their book provides an immensely readable account of the history of the struggling teen industry and a critical look at today's practices, both good and bad. It provides an original synthesis of the literature that even the most experienced will find enlightening, and it serves as a useful reference for parents by providing best-practice features—as well as caveats—to keep in mind. Particularly helpful for practitioners, academics, and students who wish to become oriented in the field and who look for the 'bigger picture.'

Karen M. Staller, University of Michigan, and author of Runaways: How the Sixties Counterculture Shaped Today's Practices and Policies

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