Menu
ncarol.com
  • Home
  • Business
  • Health
  • Books
  • Non-profit
  • Financial
  • Real Estate
  • Transportation
  • Arts
ncarol.com

NC Health Official Urges Ban on Wilderness Therapy Camps Following Child's Death
ncarol.com/10285261

Trending...
  • K4Connect Partners with Awardco to Create a Culture of Staff Appreciation in Senior Living
  • Paxaterra Global Expands Its Mission to Lead with Soul
  • City Council Candidates Unite Behind "Common Sense Contract with NYC"
Ban Wilderness Therapy Camps
Mental Health Industry Watchdog CCHR Calls for Nationwide Ban, Citing History of Abuse and Fatalities in Troubled Teen Industry

LOS ANGELES - ncarol.com -- A top North Carolina health official is calling for a ban on wilderness therapy camps in the state following the tragic death of a 12-year-old boy at a now-closed wilderness therapy facility.[1] The mental health industry watchdog, Citizens Commission on Human Rights (CCHR), supports this action and urges the prohibition of such camps nationwide to ensure the safety of youths seeking help.

In his final weeks as North Carolina's Secretary of Health and Human Services, Kody Kinsley spoke to local media, stating that he believes wilderness therapy camps should be permanently outlawed in the state. His remarks follow the February 2024 death of a child at a camp in the western part of the state, which the NC Department of Health has since closed. The boy suffocated after being zipped into a sleeping bag with a device that prevented him from opening it. An autopsy later ruled his death a homicide.

"I don't think wilderness therapy camps have a place in our continuum of care in North Carolina," Kinsley said. "The law needs to be changed to permanently remove these licenses, so they don't exist." He expressed deep sympathy for the families affected by such tragedies, emphasizing the need to prevent other parents from experiencing similar heartbreak.

To implement this change, Kinsley emphasized that new legislation must be passed by the North Carolina General Assembly. CCHR suggests this could potentially be achieved by amending NC Codes to explicitly exclude wilderness therapy camps from being licensed as residential child-care facilities. Similarly, amendments to Licensing Procedures could specify that facilities employing wilderness-based therapeutic models are not eligible for licensure under mental health or substance use disorder treatment provisions.[2] The organization has urged state lawmakers to take action by inquiring with the Department about how wilderness camps can be prohibited under the state's health regulations.

More on ncarol.com
  • Florida International University: "Psychiatry: An Industry of Death" Traveling Exhibit Educates Students on Mental Health Abuse
  • CCHR: VA's Psychiatric Treatments Betray Veterans, Fuel Suicide and Death
  • Integris Composites Named Armor Partner for U.S. Army's XM30 Combat Vehicle
  • Jaipur Countryside, 4-Star Comfort: $199 for Two— All-Inclusive with Meals + Transfers at Heritage Hotel Savista
  • Probate Shepherd® Announces a New Member Probate Attorney in Fort Worth, TX

In recent years, wilderness therapy camps have been widely scrutinized nationwide. A USA Today investigation in December 2022 revealed that many former participants described their experiences as negative and traumatizing, with some noting that these camps often serve as a gateway to longer-term residential treatment centers.[3] CCHR, which has been exposing abuse in these camps since the early 1990s, cites reports of deaths, mistreatment, and deceptive practices that have gone largely unregulated.[4] In 1995 there were almost 400 wilderness camps in the U.S.[5]

A 2008 report by the U.S. Government Accountability Office documented abuse and deaths across these facilities, and more recent findings by Breaking Code Silence estimate that 150,000 to 200,000 children are enrolled in over 2,000 such programs nationwide, which includes 40 wilderness camps.[6] In Utah, the number of wilderness camps dropped 64% from 14 in 2014 to just five in 2023.[7]

With the decline came a decrease in deaths. Nationally, deaths in these facilities decreased by 81%, from 142 in the 2000s to 27 in the 2020s.[8]

Despite a decline in the number of wilderness camps due to increased scrutiny, CCHR argues that wilderness therapy camps are still a risk to vulnerable youth and should be prohibited.

The group, which was established in 1969 by the Church of Scientology and professor of psychiatry, Dr. Thomas Szasz, helped secure federal protections in the late 1990s against restraint use in mental health residential hospitals. It has helped secure hundreds of laws and regulations worldwide that provide protections to mental health patients and their families.

More on ncarol.com
  • Phinge Announces "Test the Waters" Campaign for Potential Regulation A+ Offering: Home of Netverse Verified AI & Patented App-less Technology Platform
  • RJ Grimshaw Launches "The AI EDGE" A Practical Guide Where Leadership Meets Innovation
  • Probate Shepherd® Announces a New Member Probate Attorney in Sugar Land, TX
  • Live Good Leads with Love: Creating Opportunity, Protecting the Vulnerable and Inspiring Hope
  • Probate Shepherd® Announces a New Member Probate Attorney in The Woodlands, TX

CCHR is calling for a comprehensive overhaul of the troubled teen industry, part of which will be addressed by the recently passed federal Stop Institutional Child Abuse Act, which establishes a study to ultimately help prevent child abuse in youth residential programs. However, as the study may take several years, CCHR wants regulations now to impose robust penalties on facilities found abusing children and youths, including stronger regulations to revoke facility licenses and penalties for violations of vulnerable youth. As part of this, it says, wilderness therapy camps are no longer necessary as mental health care facilities for children and teens.

Sources:

[1] www.wbtv.com/2025/01/14/top-regulator-calls-ban-wilderness-camps-north-carolina/

[2] www.ncleg.net/EnactedLegislation/Statutes/HTML/ByArticle/Chapter_122C/Article_2.html; regulations.justia.com/states/north-carolina/title-10a/chapter-27/subchapter-g/section-0400/

[3] www.usatoday.com/in-depth/life/health-wellness/2022/12/08/wilderness-therapy-troubled-teen-industry/9890694002/

[4] "Utah wilderness therapy deaths," Salt Lake Tribune, 11 Oct. 2007,
archive.sltrib.com/story.php?ref=/news/ci_7139316

[5] "Taking Nature's Cure," U.S. News and World Report, June 26, 1995

[6] www.usatoday.com/in-depth/life/health-wellness/2022/12/08/wilderness-therapy-troubled-teen-industry/9890694002/

[7] www.sltrib.com/news/2024/05/07/nearly-half-utahs-wilderness/

[8] sierranevadaally.org/2023/08/02/dark-forest-a-look-inside-controversial-wilderness-therapy-camps/

Contact
CCHR International
***@cchr.org


Source: Citizens Commission on Human Rights

Show All News | Report Violation

0 Comments
1000 characters max.

Latest on ncarol.com
  • Lightship Security and the OpenSSL Corporation Submit OpenSSL 3.5.4 for FIPS 140-3 Validation
  • WADA AWARDS - where Diamonds melt into glamour
  • MigWay Ranked #18 Among Charlotte's Top Logistics Companies
  • First Nations Bank of Canada Partners with KYC2020 to Strengthen AML Screening and Monitoring Capabilities
  • Bitcoin will still be the leader in the cryptocurrency market in 2025, and WOA Mining enthusiasts will earn passive income
  • Triumph Thru Tears Premieres at 55th Anniversary Pamoja Celebration at the University of Georgia
  • Helping Haircare Brands Launch with Confidence: Bond & Bloom Innovation Group Leads in Product Development
  • Holiday Fineries at the Wineries on the Shawangunk Wine Trail
  • Chadwick Twillman Demands Resignation of MLive Editor Joey Oliver for Publishing Deceptive Hit Piece
  • Smile More Implant Centre Launches Cutting-Edge Website
  • K2 Integrity Names Aaron Karczmer Chief Executive Officer
  • Georgia's Lanier Islands Resort Announces Return of Magical Nights of Lights
  • Boston Industrial Solutions' Natron® XG Series Ink Exceeds Global Safety Compliance
  • West Virginia Grassroots Group Sparks Statewide Momentum in the Fight for Election Integrity
  • Chaos and Clarity: OddsTrader's Latest College Football Playoff Predictions After Week 6
  • Bookmakers Review Highlights Five Intriguing Bets to Make in October 2025
  • Bent Danholm Partners with JamesEdition to Bring Central Florida Luxury Homes to a Global Stage
  • $500K Share Dividend and AI-Cybersecurity Breakthrough in $500B Market Through Strategic Partnership with Cycurion $CYCU: iQSTEL (N A S D A Q: IQST)
  • QikBIM launches to Revolutionize Architectural Design, Expands into Asset-Backed Real Estate with $100 Million Capital OFA Group: (N A S D A Q: OFAL)
  • Five Years of Impact: New Jersey Arts & Culture Renewal Fund Celebrates Milestone Anniversary
_catLbl0 _catLbl1

Popular on ncarol.com

  • New Analysis Reveals the Complex Forces Driving the 'Great Human Reshuffle' - 732
  • Smarter Systems: ANCO Leverages Waukesha Cherry-Burrell Votator SSHE Technology
  • Open Art Call | The Art of Artificial Intelligence | Copenhagen
  • KatalisCoin: "Too Secure" for Bad Actors - Platform Embraces "Excessive Compliance" Criticism
  • Security Alert: TZNXG Warns Investors About "Fund Recovery" Scams
  • One Park Financial Earns Great Place to Work® Certification for the Eighth Time
  • Assent Unveils Extended Producer Responsibility Packaging Solution to Simplify Compliance with Expanding Packaging Laws
  • NEW power supply release from Kepco Dynatronix - HSP Advanced
  • Gemma's Hope Launches Hope Hour Gala to Raise Funds for Families Facing Pregnancy & Infant Loss
  • NIUFO Positions Platform for European Market Entry with MiCA-Aligned Infrastructure Development

Similar on ncarol.com

  • Cancer Survivor Roslyn Franken Marks 30-Year Milestone with Empowering Gift for Women
  • Florida International University: "Psychiatry: An Industry of Death" Traveling Exhibit Educates Students on Mental Health Abuse
  • CCHR: VA's Psychiatric Treatments Betray Veterans, Fuel Suicide and Death
  • Taraji P. Henson's Boris Lawrence Henson Foundation (BLHF) Announce 5th Annual Can We Talk? Arts & Wellness Summit and "i AM The Table Benefit Brunch
  • Mullins McLeod Surges Into SC Governor's Race with $1.4 Million Raised in First Quarter; Most from His Own Commitment, Not Political Pockets
  • Rep. Gina H. Curry and Dr. Conan Tu Inspire at Kopp Foundation for Diabetes Hybrid Fundraising Gala and National Leadership Forum
  • Restoration Dental Introduces YOMI Robot for High-Precision Implant Surgery in Oklahoma
  • RNHA FL Unveils Bold New Leadership Ahead of 2026 Elections
  • Smile More Implant Centre Launches Cutting-Edge Website
  • West Virginia Grassroots Group Sparks Statewide Momentum in the Fight for Election Integrity
Copyright © 2025 ncarol.com | Contact Us | Privacy Policy | Terms of Service | Contribute