Island View Residential Treatment Center | |
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Address | |
2650 West 2700 South Syracuse, Utah, Davis County 84075 |
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Information | |
School type | For-profit program, Residential Treatment Facility, Emotionally Disturbed Children |
Founded | 1994 |
Founder | Dr. W. Dean Belnap, M.D., Lorin A. Broadbent, D.S.W., Jared U. Balmer, PhD., and W. Kimball DeLaMare, L.C.S.W. |
Closed | 2014 |
Age range | 13 to 17 |
Accreditations | Utah Department of Education, the California Department of Education and the Northwest Association of Accredited Schools |
Tuition | $120,000 pa |
Owner | Aspen and CRC Health Group |
Website | http://www.islandview-rtc.com/ |
Island View Residential Treatment Center was a Delaware limited liability company that operated a residential treatment facility in Utah and closed in 2014. Aspen and CRC Health determined the program no longer fit their strategic objectives and no longer wished to operate the program. In April 2014, Island View closed and replaced by a newly created program with different ownership and management. As of April 2014, Island View no longer had a business license to practice in the city of Syracuse where their campus based.
The Syracuse campus opened in 1994 as the Island View Residential Treatment Center. Its founders were Lorin Broadbent, DSW, Jared Balmer, PhD, and W. Kimball DeLaMare, L.C.S.W.
Along with individual and family therapy, the facility utilized "Positive Peer Group" psychotherapy sessions.
In 2004, the residential treatment center was acquired by Aspen Education Group.CRC Health Group, a company owned by Bain Capital, purchased Aspen Education for $300 million in 2006. Aspen and CRC Health Group owned and operated the Syracuse campus until 2014.
A 16-year-old Pennsylvania boy hanged himself in a bathroom at Island View in 2004 after he excused himself from a movie. The staff were unsuccessful in reviving him. Island View was cited for minor issues and required to submit a plan of corrective action.
Before its closure, Island View treatment center provided subacute care to troubled adolescents experiencing mood and behavioral dysregulation, substance abuse, and difficulties at home or school. The 90-bed lockdown facility provided care to students ranging in age from 13 - 17.6 years. The average length of stay at the treatment center was 8–10 months. Teenagers at the residential program were monitored 24 hours per day, seven days per week, by team directors and houseparent staff.
The program offered a range of critical support services to troubled teens, including a therapeutic, positive peer environment and individual, group and family therapy (generally by teleconference as most students were from out of the area). Specifically, residents received intensive therapies, behavior modification, psychopharmacology, nursing assessment and intervention, diagnostic evaluation, and educational planning. Residents typically received seven therapy sessions a week, in the form of five group, one individual, and one family therapy session. The program used a "levels" structure - as a student’s behavior improves, he or she was advanced to the next level with rewards such as extra phone privileges attached to each higher level.