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COMPREHENSIVE PROGRAM
Urgent prevention better than cure for
serious youth offenders
Youth Horizons, New Zealand’s only major treatment
provider for young people with Severe Conduct Disorder (SCD), warns that
more resources are urgently required to treat youths with SCD to prevent
them from developing into lifelong criminals.
The prevention message will be one of the major themes of the Youth
Horizons Conference on Conduct Disorder at the Rutherford Centre,
Victoria University of Wellington, on 27 and 28 June 2005.
Around 2 to 5 percent of young people aged between 12 and 17 years
exhibit SCD, but they commit around 50 percent of all crime, and are
also responsible for more serious and violent crimes than their peers,
according to Youth Horizons National Clinical Director Justine Harris.
“If left unchecked, the estimated cost to the country
over the course of each offender’s life is well in excess of $3 million
in policing, court costs, and imprisonment,” says Justine Harris. “And
that figure does not even begin to address the larger costs to society
or the suffering inflicted on the victims of the crimes.”
Young people with SCD show persistent disregard for normal societal
rules and the basic rights of others. The condition is commonly
manifested in aggression towards people or animals, destruction of
property, deceitfulness or theft, and serious violation of rules and
laws.
“Youth Horizons is currently the only major treatment provider for these
kids, but we need to expand our capacity or the problem will grow beyond
our ability to effectively address it,” says Justine Harris.
The organisation provides a range of interventions in residential and
foster care settings, and intensive clinical support services in the
community. The most effective of these services is Multi-Systemic
Therapy (MST), an intensive treatment programme that targets young
people at risk of placement into residential or foster care and instead
treats them in their own home environment.
“We set up a collaboration between our therapists and
the family to develop natural support systems to, for example, reduce
the seriousness of the young person’s antisocial behaviour. The average
length of treatment is about 60 hours of contact over a four-month
period, with the therapist on-call 24/7 to support the family,” says
Justine Harris.
According to a Ministry of Social Development report released in
February 2005, Youth Horizons’ programmes offer considerable real
savings to taxpayers because by effectively treating SCD, young
offenders may be prevented from developing into lifelong criminals
thereby reducing long-term court and prison costs.
“MST and other highly interventionist approaches to SCD are effective,
efficient, and less expensive than imprisonment but they are not a
‘quick fix’,” says Justine Harris.
“Our programmes take time to show results and require
substantial funding sustained over the long term to reduce the amount of
serious offending committed by youths with SCD. “To achieve this, we
need to move now to expand our services, develop the skills of our
current therapists, and attract and train new ones. Our conference on
Conduct Disorder at Victoria University is part of our strategy to raise
awareness of the condition and thereby try to influence long-term
government planning.”
Youth Horizons background in 1996, the Department of Social Welfare
invited two child and adolescent psychiatrists — Professor John Werry
and Doctor Peter McGeorge — to design a treatment programme for young
people diagnosed with SCD. Youth Horizons was the result.
Youth Horizons is a non-profit organisation providing treatments for
families and young people with complex behavioural and/or mental health
needs. The organisation has over 100 staff and operates five residential
homes. Around 60 young people are in treatment with Youth Horizons at
any one time, some in residential care, around 20 in foster care, and
the rest within their own families.
The public cannot apply directly to Youth Horizons for treatment — young
people are referred to Youth Horizons for treatment by Government
agencies such as Child, Youth and Family (CYF), the Ministry of Health,
and the Department of Corrections.
Youth Horizons’ services include:
- Auckland Bridging Programme A residential
programme for young people in the Auckland region who are under the
custody of CYF and have been diagnosed with SCD. The programme
consists of six homes across the Auckland region.
- Early Intervention Service for Adolescent
Psychosis A mobile youth and family focused early intervention
service for adolescents aged 13 to 18 years at risk of developing a
first episode of psychosis. The service covers Waikato, Hauraki and
the Coromandel regions.
- Intensive Clinical Intervention Service Based on
MST principles, the service aims to work intensively with the family
and wider social ecology of children and youth who have involvement
with both CYF and mental health services. The service covers the
Waikato and Bay of Plenty regions.
- Hamilton Family Home: A five-bed family home for
young people with severe behavioural problems.
- Respite Foster Care Gives parents of children
with complex mental health and behaviour problems a weekend respite
from the extraordinary parental demands placed upon them.
- Specialist Caregiver Programme The Specialist
Caregiver Programme provides young people with extreme behavioural
problems the opportunity to live in the community with specialist
caregivers.
- Youth Mentoring Programme Matches young people
with volunteer adult mentors to guide young people through the
challenging transition from care to independent living.
- Ka Awatea Provides comprehensive aftercare
services to young people who are becoming independent from CYF care.
22 June 2005
Press Release: Youth Horizons Trust
http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/PO0506/S00235.htm
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