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Representative Chip Limehouse is looking into it from the legislative direction.For something this important, I certainly would not give up after one attempt. Likewise, the state's Mental Health Dept. should be contacted, and legal representatives and politicians so that laws regarding release of information can be changed, and the medical board so that risk assessment can be changed. I can think of many organizations that should be contacted so that mentally ill patients are never placed in a position of being able to ever elope from a treatment facility ever again and place the public at such a great risk of being harmed.
I am fairly certain there is a good reason they are not answering emails and phone calls from the general public.
DHEC is responsible for the inspections of the center.
From an earlier link:
...It operates under a DHEC license for children and adolescent treatment centers and is licensed for 60 beds.
The regulations for that kind of center restrict measures such as use of restraint or isolation and require the facility to have windows that can be opened for ventilation. The center is not required to report runaways, just hospitalizations and deaths.
"As far as who comes there, we don't have any authority over that. I don't know that anybody does," said DHEC spokesman Thom Berry.
In a news release, the D.C. youth center described the Palmetto center as a "secure placement facility." Asked what that entailed, Reggie Sanders, D.C. Human Services Department spokesman, said, "I think you would have to call the center and ask them that."
Residential centers across the country treat criminal offender juveniles as regular clients, as well as juveniles from foster care and private homes, said Steve Rublee, Medical University Institute of Psychiatry director.
Rublee ran a children and adolescent residential facility for seven years.
There is a range of how restrictive the individual facilities are, but "it's a pretty restrictive environment in total," he said. Clients routinely are admitted from out of state.
"They are kids who don't have an immediate crisis but have long-standing problems and need long-term care," he said. The facilities in general are capable of handling clients with various levels of security, depending on staff and facilities, he said.
Kari Sisson, American Association of Child Residential Centers national director, said clients "go AWOL all the time." She was unfamiliar with the Summerville center, which is not an association member.