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What good is tough love?
It is the ultimate parental nightmare: Your
affectionate child is transformed, seemingly overnight, into an
out-of-control, drug-addicted, hostile teen-ager. Many parents blame
themselves. "Where did we go wrong?" they ask. The kids, meanwhile,
hurtle through their own bewildering adolescent nightmare.
I know. My descent into drug addiction started in high
school and now, as an adult, I have a much better understanding of my
parents' anguish and of what I was going through. And, after devoting
several years to researching treatment programs, I'm also aware of the
traps that many parents fall into when they finally seek help for their
kids.
Many anguished parents put their faith in strict
residential rehab programs. At first glance, these programs, which are
commonly based on a philosophy of "tough love," seem to offer a safe
respite from the streets -- promising reform through confrontational
therapy in an isolated environment where kids cannot escape the need to
change their behavior.
At the same time, during the '90s, it became
increasingly common for courts to sentence young delinquents to
military-style boot camps as an alternative to incarceration.
But lack of government oversight and regulation makes
it impossible for parents to thoroughly investigate services provided by
such "behavior modification centers," "wilderness programs" and
"emotional growth boarding schools." Moreover, the very notion of making
kids who are already suffering go through more suffering is
psychologically backwards. And there is little data to support these
institutions' claims of success.
Nonetheless, a billion-dollar industry now promotes
such tough-love treatment. There are several hundred public and private
facilities -- both in the United States and outside the country -- but
serving almost exclusively American citizens.
Although no one officially keeps track, my research
suggests that some 10,000 to 20,000 teenagers are enrolled each year. A
patchwork of lax and ineffective state regulations -- no federal rules
apply -- is all that protects these young people from institutions that
are regulated like ordinary boarding schools but that sometimes use more
severe methods of restraint and isolation than psychiatric centers.
There are no special qualifications required of the people who oversee
such facilities.
Nor is any diagnosis required before enrollment. If a
parent thinks a child needs help and can pay the $3,000- to
$5,000-a-month fees, any teenager can be held in a private program, with
infrequent contact with the outside world, until he or she turns 18.
Harsh treatment
Over the past three years, I have interviewed more than 100
adolescents and parents with personal experience in both public and
private programs and have read hundreds of media accounts, thousands of
Internet postings and stacks of legal documents. I have also spoken with
numerous psychiatrists, psychologists, sociologists and juvenile justice
experts. Of course there is a range of approaches at different
institutions, but most of the people I spoke with agree that the
industry is dominated by the idea that harsh rules and even brutal
confrontation are necessary to help troubled teenagers. University of
California at Berkeley sociologist Elliott Currie, who did an
ethnographic study of teen residential addiction treatment for the
National Institute on Drug Abuse, told me that he could not think of a
program that wasn't influenced by this philosophy.
Unfortunately, tough treatments usually draw public
scrutiny only when practitioners go too far, prompting speculation about
when "tough is too tough." Dozens of deaths -- such as January's case of
14-year-old Martin Lee Anderson, who died hours after entering a
juvenile boot camp that was under contract with Florida's juvenile
justice system -- and cases of abuse have been documented since tough
love treatment was popularized in the '70s and '80s by programs such as
Synanon and Straight, Inc.
Parents and teenagers involved with both state-run and
private institutions have told me of beatings, sleep deprivation, use of
stress positions, emotional abuse and public humiliation, such as making
them dress as prostitutes or in drag and addressing them in coarse
language. I've heard about the most extreme examples, of course, but the
lack of regulation and oversight means that such abuses are always a
risk.
The more important question -- whether tough love is
the right approach itself -- is almost never broached. Advocates of
these programs call the excesses tragic but isolated cases. They offer
anecdotes of miraculous transformations to balance the horror stories.
And they argue that tough love only seems brutal, saying that surgery
seems violent too, without an understanding of its vital purpose.
What advocates don't take from their medical analogy,
however, is the principle of "first, do no harm" and the associated
requirement of scientific proof of safety and efficacy. Research
conducted by the National Institutes of Health and the Department of
Justice tells a very different story from the testimonials -- one that
has been obscured by myths about why addicts take drugs and why troubled
teenagers act out.
As a former addict, who began using cocaine and heroin
in late adolescence, I have never understood the logic of tough love. I
took drugs compulsively because I hated myself, because I felt as if no
one -- not even my family -- would love me if they really knew me. Drugs
allowed me to blot out that depressive self-focus and socialize as
though I thought I was OK.
How could being confronted about my bad behavior help
me with that? Why would being humiliated, once I'd given up the only
thing that allowed me to feel safe emotionally, make me better? My
problem wasn't that I needed to be cut down to size. It was that I felt
I didn't measure up.
In fact, fear of cruel treatment kept me from seeking
help long after I began to suspect I needed it. My addiction probably
could have been shortened if I'd thought I could have found care that
didn't conform to what I knew was (and sadly, still is) the dominant
confrontational approach.
Fortunately, the short-term residential treatment I
underwent was relatively light on confrontation, but I still had to deal
with a counselor who tried to humiliate me by disparaging my looks when
I expressed insecurity about myself.
The trouble with tough love is twofold. First, the
underlying philosophy -- that pain produces growth -- lends itself to
abuse of power. Second, and more important, toughness doesn't begin to
address the real problem. Troubled teenagers aren't usually "spoiled
brats" who "just need to be taught respect." Like me, they most often go
wrong because they hurt, not because they don't want to do the right
thing. That became all the more evident to me when I took a look at who
goes to these schools.
A surprisingly large number are sent away in the midst
of a parental divorce; others are enrolled for depression or other
serious mental illnesses. Many have lengthy histories of trauma and
abuse. The last thing such kids need is another experience of
powerlessness, humiliation and pain.
Change over time
Sadly, tough love often looks as if it works. For one thing,
longitudinal studies find that most kids, even amongst the most
troubled, eventually grow out of bad behavior, so the magic of time can
be mistaken for the magic of treatment. Second, the experience of being
emotionally terrorized can produce compliance that looks like real
change, at least initially.
The bigger picture suggests that tough love tends to
backfire. My recent interviews confirm the findings of more formal
studies. The Justice Department has released reports comparing boot
camps with traditional correctional facilities for juvenile offenders,
concluding in 2001 that neither facility "is more effective in reducing
recidivism."
In late 2004, the National Institutes of Health
released a "state of the science" consensus statement, concluding that
"get tough" treatments "do not work and there is some evidence that they
may make the problem worse." Indeed, some young people leave these
programs with post-traumatic stress disorder and exacerbations of their
original problems.
These strict institutional settings work at
cross-purposes with the developmental stages adolescents go through.
According to psychiatrists, teenagers need to gain responsibility, begin
to test romantic relationships and learn to think critically. But in
tough programs, teenagers' choices of activities are overwhelmingly made
for them: They are not allowed to date (in many, even eye contact with
the opposite sex is punished), and they are punished if they dissent
from a program's therapeutic prescriptions. All this despite evidence
that a totally controlled environment delays maturation.
Why is tough love still so prevalent? The acceptance
of anecdote as evidence is one reason, as are the hurried decisions of
desperate parents who can no longer find a way of communicating with
their wayward kids. But most significant is the lack of the equivalent
of a Food and Drug Administration for behavioral health care -- with the
result that most people are unaware that these programs have never been
proved safe or effective. It's part of what a recent Institute of
Medicine report labeled a "quality chasm" between the behavioral
treatments known to work and those that are actually available. So
parents rely on hearsay and the word of so-called experts.
Unfortunately, in the world of teen behavioral
programs, there are no specific educational or professional
requirements. Anyone can claim to be an expert.
Maia Szalavitz is the author of "Help at Any Cost:
How the Troubled-Teen Industry Cons Parents and Hurts Kids"
(Riverhead Books).
5 February 2006
http://www.delawareonline.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060205/OPINION09/602050303/1110
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