Menu
Washingtoner
  • Home
  • Health
  • Boeing
  • Technology
  • Aerospace
  • Daryl Guberman
  • Business
  • ANSI-ANAB
  • Software
Washingtoner

NC Health Official Urges Ban on Wilderness Therapy Camps Following Child's Death
Washingtoner/10281803

Trending...
  • Applicants Sought for the Tacoma Creates Advisory Board
  • Andrew Tate Says Los Angeles Is "Where I Belong" as He Hints at USA Move
  • Tacoma: City Manager Hyun Kim to Present 'Roadmap to Recovery' on May 12
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 - Washingtoner -- 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 Washingtoner
  • The AI Direction Deficit: TripleTen Study Finds Staff Get Told to Use AI — But Not Trained to Use It
  • Spokane: Flags Lowered for Peace Officers Memorial Day
  • $29.8 Million Record Setting Q1 with Boosted Annual Guidance to $160 Million for Expanding Pre-Owned Boat Dealer: Off The Hook YS, Inc. N Y S E: OTH
  • All About Technology Celebrates 25 Years of Bridging Detroit's Digital Divide
  • iatroX surpasses 500,000 clinical queries and expands specialist exam coverage

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 Washingtoner
  • Inside-Out Hollywood: The Relentless Rise of Joseph Nybyk (AKA Joseph Neibich)
  • Lumetra Launches Engram, an MCP-Native Memory Layer Scoring 91.6% on LongMemEval
  • Spokane Parks & Recreation's Therapeutic Recreation Receives Donation
  • SRK Collective Media Group Launches with a Modern Approach to Media, Authority Building, and Cultural Visibility
  • MSBG Corporation Acquires GridWatch US Telemetry Automation System

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
Filed Under: Government

Show All News | Disclaimer | Report Violation

0 Comments
1000 characters max.

Latest on Washingtoner
  • From Blank Page to Published Book
  • Virginia Marchese's Paradox: A Nation Still Deciding Who Belongs Examines Race, Migration, Law, and America's Unfinished Struggle for Equality
  • Larry R. Wasion's Jump Gate III RoadMaker Blends Cutting-Edge Sci-Fi with High-Stakes Space Exploration and Complex Technologies
  • American Mensa and Davidson Institute Join Forces To Strengthen Support for Profoundly Gifted Youth
  • SpeedyIndex Rolls Out Automated API for Mass URL Verification, Solving the Backlink Blind Spot for SEO Agencies
  • KLEKT Announces Appointment of Jay Kimpton to Board of Directors
  • Michigan Attorney General Closed FGM Licensing Investigations Months Before Federal Case Ended, Records Show
  • Mensa Foundation Event Reframes Brain Health for Every Age
  • DLT Resolution, Inc. (Stock Symbol: DLTI) Expands Into the $224 Billion Life Settlements Market While Accelerating Telecom Growth Across Canada
  • Ashley Wineland's 'Love + Heartbreak' Tour Brings her Emotional and Empowering Album 'Wineland' to Nationwide Audiences
  • Tacoma City Council Restricts Unauthorized Use of Public Property for Civil Immigration Enforcement
  • Spokane Police investigate shooting in north Spokane and make an arrest
  • People & Stories/Gente y Cuentos Welcomes Two New Trustees as Organization Enters 54th Year and Expands Community Reach
  • Tacoma: City Manager Hyun Kim Details 'Roadmap to Recovery' Addressing the City's General Fund Deficit and Modernizing City Operations
  • With a Dream and a Team, Monalisa Okojie Is Empowering the Next Generation Through EXPOSE NGO
  • Spokane: DUI Driver Taken Into Custody After Attempting to Flee from Officers
  • Tacoma Police Department to Recognize Five Tacoma Public School Employees Who Intervened in Violent Assault
  • American Properties Realty, Inc. Celebrates 2026 FAME Awards - Community of the Year - Heritage at South Brunswick
  • Spokane City Council Approves Activation of Public Spaces Program
  • Mel Blackwell to Keynote 2026 NSSF Marketing and Leadership Summit
_catLbl0 _catLbl1

Popular on Washingtoner

  • Altruvest and Financial Executives International Canada Announce Strategic Partnership to Strengthen Nonprofit Boards Across Canada
  • Freedomtech Solutions creates 'Global Data Centre Network (IDCN)'
  • Virginia Moving Company Nearly Doubles Customer Calls in Two Weeks After Switching to CARL — the Bold New Alternative to WordPress
  • New Report Reveals Plane Crashes Are Not Where You'd Think
  • Umbrella Becomes First FinOps Platform to Support AWS Billing Transfer Onboarding
  • City Council Adopts Updated Resolution for ‘Connect Tacoma’ Ballot Proposition
  • Tacoma: Pothole Palooza Returns May 4 – 15 to Focus on Maintenance and Preservation of 10 Arterial Roadways
  • L2 Aviation Acquires Advance Aero
  • Seattle Filmmaker Maikaru Launches Mainasty Press with Ambitious "21 Novels in 21 Months" Initiative
  • Axencis Launches Performance Partnership for Brand Protection

Similar on Washingtoner

  • Collectibles EvoRelic Celebrates Stellar 4.8-Star Customer Rating
  • Pediatrician Launches "Confessions of a Detective Doctor" Children's Book Series
  • Spokane: Flags Lowered for Peace Officers Memorial Day
  • iatroX surpasses 500,000 clinical queries and expands specialist exam coverage
  • Spokane Parks & Recreation’s Therapeutic Recreation Receives Donation
  • KT Medical Staffing Expands Concierge Nursing and Private Duty Nursing Services in Orange County
  • Grow My Security Company Launches Next-Generation Website and Expands Strategic Marketing Solutions for the Security Industry
  • $4.8M in Contracted AI Revenue with Projections of $30M Over 6-12 Months for Diversified AI Software and Platform-Based Services Provider XMax Inc
  • Longevity Academy Launches The Longevity Leaders Project with Interview of Respira Global CEO
  • Virginia Marchese's Paradox: A Nation Still Deciding Who Belongs Examines Race, Migration, Law, and America's Unfinished Struggle for Equality
Copyright © 2026 washingtoner.com | Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Contribute