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<blockquote data-quote="meowbunny" data-source="post: 221943" data-attributes="member: 3626"><p>One other thing. My daughter is very good friends with a couple of CEDU grads. They are not resentful about having gone there but rather feel that it truly helped them. One girl flat out says it saved her life. These girls are open about their classmates, including the ones who quit before graduating, the ones who went back to their old lifestyle, the ones who are resentful, and the successes, etc. From what I could tell, the majority were at the very least accepting of their need to be there and not exceptionally resentful.</p><p> </p><p>Her own program actually had a lower success rate. However, they also dealt with a very specialized group. Reactive Attachment Disorder (RAD) is extremely hard to treat. To me, "success" for Reactive Attachment Disorder (RAD) kids is if they can be taught even an iota of empathy. Her Residential Treatment Center (RTC) did succeed in that with about 45% of the kids. Not a high success rate, but considering what they were working with, pretty darn good.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="meowbunny, post: 221943, member: 3626"] One other thing. My daughter is very good friends with a couple of CEDU grads. They are not resentful about having gone there but rather feel that it truly helped them. One girl flat out says it saved her life. These girls are open about their classmates, including the ones who quit before graduating, the ones who went back to their old lifestyle, the ones who are resentful, and the successes, etc. From what I could tell, the majority were at the very least accepting of their need to be there and not exceptionally resentful. Her own program actually had a lower success rate. However, they also dealt with a very specialized group. Reactive Attachment Disorder (RAD) is extremely hard to treat. To me, "success" for Reactive Attachment Disorder (RAD) kids is if they can be taught even an iota of empathy. Her Residential Treatment Center (RTC) did succeed in that with about 45% of the kids. Not a high success rate, but considering what they were working with, pretty darn good. [/QUOTE]
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