Skip to content
  • Home
  • Travel
  • Tourism
  • Hotels
  • Business
  • Transportation
  • Consumer
  • Real Estate
  • Deals
Menu

eTravel Wire

  • Home
  • Travel
  • Tourism
  • Hotels
  • Business
  • Transportation
  • Consumer
  • Real Estate
  • Deals

Urgent Reform Demanded to Stop Child Abuse in Youth Behavioral Facilities
eTravel Wire/10318412

Trending...
  • Dave Aronberg Named 2026 John C. Randolph Award Recipient by Palm Beach Fellowship of Christians & Jews
  • Senseeker Machining Company Acquires Axis Machine to Establish Machining Capability for Improved Supply Chain Control and Shorter Delivery Times
  • Hoy Law Wins Supreme Court Decision Establishing Federal Trucking Regulations as the Standard of Care in South Dakota
Children Abused, Dying in Psychiatric Hospitals
Despite decades of investigations, fines, and federal mandates, abuse continues in psychiatric and behavioral institutions for youth. CCHR calls for immediate government action—not another three-year study—before more children are harmed.

LOS ANGELES - eTravelWire -- Amid a surge of reported abuse and deaths in psychiatric and behavioral residential programs for youth, the Citizens Commission on Human Rights International (CCHR) is urging immediate and sweeping federal intervention. CCHR warns that continued inaction by state and federal agencies endangers lives and enables a mental health system where vulnerable children and adolescents are subjected to trauma, neglect, and avoidable harm.

In December 2024, Congress passed the bipartisan Stop Institutional Child Abuse Act, calling for a study by the National Academies of Sciences into the state of youth in institutional programs. However, the legislation granted a three-year window to complete the investigation—a delay CCHR deems unconscionable now, given ongoing reports of harm.

"Children are dying. Others are being restrained, secluded, forcibly drugged, or sexually abused," said Jan Eastgate, president of CCHR International. "How many more cases of tragedy must occur before regulators respond with urgency? A three-year timeline is a death sentence for some of these children."

A 2024 peer-reviewed study in Psychiatric Services confirmed that the use of seclusion and mechanical restraints remains widespread in U.S. psychiatric hospitals, despite the documented trauma and risk of death. The study called on the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) and The Joint Commission to implement reforms to end the practice.

A previous New York Times investigation estimated at least 86 deaths in youth behavioral programs from 2000 to 2015, noting that children in these institutions are often subjected to conditions that would be unlawful for prisoners—including isolation, and physical and chemical restraint.[1]

In just the past few weeks, a string of new incidents has surfaced from across the U.S. involving youth facilities, including:
  • Two girls, aged 12 and 13, died by suicide in May in a North Carolina behavioral treatment facility, forcing its closure.[2]
  • Reports of hundreds of prolonged restraint incidents in a single California psychiatric facility within months.[3]
  • A teenage boy was repeatedly sexually abused by staff at a New Mexico behavioral facility.[4]
  • Seclusion and restraint of children as young as five; Vermont state authorities confirmed over 500 cases.[5]
  • New legislation was passed in Maryland restricting the use of physical restraints during youth transport to psych facilities.[6]

Although multiple federal investigations have led to substantial fines and civil settlements, CCHR asserts these penalties have failed to deter misconduct, patient harm, and deaths. "Financial penalties are clearly not enough. Many of these settlements are treated as the cost of doing business," Eastgate noted. CCHR also emphasizes that current tools used by government agencies—such as consent agreements or Corporate Integrity Agreements (CIAs)—do not work. These measures allow institutions with a history of serious violations to remain operational after promising internal improvements. "Voluntary promises are violated again and again, and children suffer the consequences," Eastgate said. "These agreements create a dangerous illusion of accountability."

More on eTravel Wire
  • Finland's €1.3 Billion Digital Gambling Market Faces Regulatory Tug-of-War as Player Protection Debate Intensifies
  • Savista Unveils Countryside Yoga Retreats in the Heart of Rural Jaipur
  • Angels Of Dirt Premieres on Youtube, Announces Paige Keck Helmet Sponsorship for 2026 Season
  • "They Said It Was Impossible": This Bottle Turns Any Freshwater Source Into Ice-Cold, Purified Drinking Water in Seconds
  • Patron Saints Of Music Names Allie Moskovits Head Of Sync & Business Development

The organization is calling on Congress and the Administration to take such actions as:
  • Accelerate the Stop Institutional Child Abuse Act investigation
  • Withhold CMS and Medicaid funding from facilities with substantiated abuse records
  • Freeze new licenses or bed expansions for companies under investigation
  • Establish criminal penalties for executives and staff found complicit in systemic abuse
  • Prohibit the use of further Corporate Integrity or improvement agreements for known violators.

In June 2024, a U.S. Senate Finance Committee report into several for-profit youth behavioral hospital chains described the harms children experienced resulted, in part, from financial models that prioritize revenue over safety. The Committee urged "bold intervention" to prevent further tragedies.

Prominent legal professionals agree. KBA attorney Kayla Ferrel Onder stated: "More effective oversight systems need to be in place to protect patients. This includes stricter penalties for facilities found guilty of abuse or fraud. Jail time for executives and significantly larger financial penalties may be necessary to curb misconduct prevalent in the behavioral healthcare industry."[7]

Attorney Tommy James cites horrendous physical abuse and emotional trauma in behavioral residential facilities, stating, "those responsible must be held accountable."[8] Another attorney, Kayla Ferrel Onder, said the abuse is so extensive that it reflected a "systemic failure," which needs to stop.[9]

CCHR maintains an extensive record of documented youth abuse in psychiatric facilities, including seclusion, restraint, sexual assault, and forced drugging. "Children should not be warehoused, abused, or silenced," said Eastgate. "What is happening now is a humanitarian crisis hiding in plain sight."

Quoting lawmakers who have supported the Stop Institutional Child Abuse Act, Rep. Ro Khanna stated: "The industry has gone unchecked for too long."[10] Senator Tommy Tuberville added: "We need more sunlight… to stop the waste, fraud, and abuse in the system."

"This is not a policy debate—it is a moral imperative," Eastgate concluded.
"We are calling on legislators, prosecutors, and health agencies to act now. No more broken promises. No more promises of avoidable deaths. No more children forgotten in the system."

About CCHR: The government-acclaimed watchdog and award-winning advocacy group was established in 1969 by the Church of Scientology and Professor of Psychiatry, Dr. Thomas Szasz.

More on eTravel Wire
  • Dave Aronberg Named 2026 John C. Randolph Award Recipient by Palm Beach Fellowship of Christians & Jews
  • General Relativity Challenged by New Tension Discovered in Dark Siren Cosmology
  • Unseasonable Warmth Triggers Early Pest Season Along I-5 Corridor
  • VIP Vacations Named Winner in 2026 WeddingWire Couples' Choice Awards®
  • Bug Busters Expands Service Footprint With New Carrollton, Georgia Branch

Sources:

[1] Alexander Stockton, "Can you punish a child's mental health problems away?" The New York Times, 11 Oct. 2022, www.nytimes.com/interactive/2022/10/11/opinion/teen-mental-health-care.html

[2] Jeffery Collins, "Residential treatment school closes in North Carolina after deaths of 2 girls," AP News, 3 June 2025, apnews.com/article/therapy-school-closes-north-carolina-asheville-academy-9854c3ca7cda11cc06f05d9fccef4112

[3] "California watchdog finds for-profit psychiatric hospital abused patients," San Francisco Chronicle, 19 May 2025

[4] "Suit alleges teen repeatedly abused by worker at former youth residential treatment center," Santa Fe New Mexican, 29 May 2025, www.santafenewmexican.com/news/local_news/suit-alleges-teen-repeatedly-abused-by-worker-at-former-youth-residential-treatment-center/article_be37888c-4bbe-41db-bd35-c76f3c8eb6c1.html

[5] "Youth in Vermont custody have been physically restrained hundreds of times in recent years," VT Digger, 22 May 2025, vtdigger.org/2025/05/22/youth-in-vermont-custody-have-been-physically-restrained-hundreds-of-times-in-recent-years/

[6] legiscan.com/MD/text/SB400/id/3232730

[7] kbaattorneys.com/acadia-abuse-behavioral-health-facilities/

[8] Erica Thomas, "Tuskegee youth facility dubbed 'House of Horrors' in latest lawsuit," 1819 News, 27 Aug. 2024, 1819news.com/news/item/tuskegee-youth-facility-dubbed-house-of-horrors-in-latest-lawsuit

[9] "Letter: The alarming pattern of abuse at Acadia Healthcare facilities," Springfield Daily Citizen, 29 May 2025, sgfcitizen.org/voices-opinion/letters/letter-the-alarming-pattern-of-abuse-at-acadia-healthcare-facilities/

[10] www.cchrint.org/2024/12/27/paris-hilton-congress-praised-for-teen-behavioral-treatment-abuse-prevention-and-oversight/ citing khanna.house.gov/media/press-releases/khanna-merkley-cornyn-tuberville-and-carter-joined-paris-hilton-celebrating

Contact
CCHR International
***@cchr.org


Source: Citizens Commission on Human Rights International
Filed Under: Consumer

Show All News | Report Violation

0 Comments
1000 characters max.

Latest on eTravel Wire
  • Patent Bar Exam Candidates Achieve 30% Higher Pass Rates with Wysebridge's 2026 Platform
  • Travel job seekers jump 62% in Jan
  • Municipal Carbon Field Guide Launched by LandConnect -- New Revenue Streams for Cities Managing Vacant Land
  • Hoy Law Wins Supreme Court Decision Establishing Federal Trucking Regulations as the Standard of Care in South Dakota
  • Dr. Rashad Richey's Indisputable Shatters Records, Over 1 Billion YouTube Views, Top 1% Podcast, 3.2 Million Viewers Daily
  • Local Maritime Veterans Partner to Launch Drift Away Charter on Tybee Island
  • Baton Rouge's New "Black History Legacy Trail", Reclaims Its Role In the Civil Rights Movement: Unveiling Ceremony Set for February 20
  • Tawaf E Haram Travel Launches Highly Personalised Umrah Services for Pilgrims Across the UK
  • Grand Opening: New Single-Family Homes Now Open for Sale at Heritage at Manalapan
  • Nina Hebb Appointed as Director of Entertainment for The Railyard Event & Conference Center
  • Shelter Structures America Announces Distribution Partnership with The DuraTrac Group
  • The OpenSSL Corporation Releases Its Annual Report 2025
  • FindPowder.com Launches in 2025: A New AI-Powered Platform for Skiers and Snowboarders
  • Iranian-Born Engineer Mohsen Bahmani Introduces Propeller-Less Propulsion for Urban Air Mobility
  • Aleen Inc. (C S E: ALEN.U) Advances Digital Wellness Vision with Streamlined Platform Navigation and Long-Term Growth Strategy
  • RimbaMindaAI Officially Launches Version 3.0 Following Strategic Breakthrough in Malaysian Market Analysis
  • Fed Rate Pause & Dow 50k: Irfan Zuyrel on Liquidity Shifts, Crypto Volatility, and the ASEAN Opportunity
  • 20/20 Institute Launches Updated Vision Correction Procedures Page for Denver & Colorado Springs
  • OneVizion Announces Next Phase of Growth as Brad Kitchens Joins Board of Directors
  • New Children's Picture Book "Diwa of Mount Luntian" Focuses on Calm, Culture, and Connection for Today's Families
Next Article _docTitle2

Related Posts

_docTitle2

_docDesc2
Read More about _docTitle2

Popular on eTravelWire

  • Sharpe Automotive Redefines Local Car Care with "Transparency-First" Service Model in Santee - 206
  • UK Financial Ltd Announces CoinMarketCap Supply Verification And Market Positioning Review For Regulated Security Tokens SMPRA And SMCAT - 201
  • UK Financial Ltd Advances Compliance Strategy With January 30th CATEX Exchange Listing Of Maya Preferred PRA Preferred Class Regulated Security Token - 190
  • Crossroads4Hope Welcomes New Trustees to Board of Directors as Organization Enters 25th Year of Caring - 184
  • $80 Million Revenue Backlog for AI Cybersecurity Company Building the Future of Integrated Cybersecurity and Public Safety: $CYCU - 162
  • New Medium Article Explores Why Emotional Conversations Fail and What Most People Don't Understand About Connection - 141
  • Does EMDR Really Work? New Article Explores How Trauma Gets Stuck in the Brain and How Healing Begins - 134
  • Finland's New Gambling Watchdog Handed Sweeping Powers to Revoke Licenses and Block Illegal Casino Sites - 120
  • Impact Futures Group expands through acquisition of specialist healthcare sector training provider Caring for Care - 120
  • Georgia's Lanier Islands Resort Nears Completion of Multi-Million-Dollar Room Refresh - 118

Similar on eTravelWire

  • Amy Turner Receives 2025 ENPY Partnership Builder Award from The Community Foundation
  • Hubble Tension Solved? Study finds evidence of an 'Invisible Bias' in How We Measure the Universe
  • Finland's €1.3 Billion Digital Gambling Market Faces Regulatory Tug-of-War as Player Protection Debate Intensifies
  • "They Said It Was Impossible": This Bottle Turns Any Freshwater Source Into Ice-Cold, Purified Drinking Water in Seconds
  • General Relativity Challenged by New Tension Discovered in Dark Siren Cosmology
  • Why Finland Had No Choice But to Legalize Online Gambling
  • The Quasar Dipole Phenomenon is likely just a complex systematics artifact
  • The Rise of Comprehensive Home Water Treatment Systems
  • Municipal Carbon Field Guide Launched by LandConnect -- New Revenue Streams for Cities Managing Vacant Land
  • Dr. Rashad Richey's Indisputable Shatters Records, Over 1 Billion YouTube Views, Top 1% Podcast, 3.2 Million Viewers Daily
Theme by Bloompixel. Proudly Powered by WordPress
  • Contribute
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us