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Thread: Discharged; not good

  1. #1
    Warrior Parent maril's Avatar
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    Discharged; not good


    Tonight, GFG was discharged early from the drug and alcohol partial program he was in. To this point, this treatment seemed to have a positive effect, he was willing to go, and staff said GFG participated and was a good guy. They sent him packing because he chose to leave the building during break, which is not permitted; he broke this rule several times previously.

    Frankly, I am stunned and saddened.

    My husband made a comment to me that maybe it had something to do with the fact that I have called on several occasions to speak with staff, as GFG has problems at home and school, and I was looking for referrals (thinking they might steer me in the right direction). I was never inappropriate, only persistent.

    Recently, my brother and I were talking about GFG, and he agreed with me that we are in for the long haul - BUT his interpretation was like maybe in ten years, we might see improvement. Ten years...get out of town! I don't think I can hang in there for ten more years...
    Last edited by maril; 12-15-2008 at 08:33 PM.
    GFG, son - Dx of ADHD, predominantly inattentive type; R/O anxiety disorder, NOS; H/O cannabis abuse. Young adult, who is experiencing growing pains
    DD - Adult on a good path, working FT
    DH and me - Long-time partners

  2. #2
    Roll With It susiestar's Avatar
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    Re: Discharged; not good

    I am sorry. I doubt they discharged your son b/c you called and asked questions. It is pretty common for programs to have very strict rules. If your son left the building, and has had several warnings about this, then they discharged him for that.

    The reason they don't let them leave the bldg is that they could go out and get high and then come back in. It is a big problem in outpatient programs. It is actually common, from what I understand around here, for them to discharge a patient the FIRST time they break this rule. So your gfg continued to push b/c he got away with it - pretty common gfg behavior, but if he is doing it in the program then it can lead other kids to similar behaviors.

    What plans do you have now to get your gfg into help for his sub abuse issues? Was there an agreement that he would go to the program or leave? (I am sorry, I can't remember). whatever the ultimatum/plan/agreement you had, now you are going to need to follow through with the consequences of not doing what he should in the program.

    Whatever you do, you have my support. Just don't let ANY of the blame for htis be on YOUR shoulders - it is TOTALLY his responsibility to follow rules, and the consequences are HIS.
    Susie - Mom of 3, only 2 live at home.
    Wiz -pc/gfg- 18yo son in COLLEGE!
    J - pc-15yo dau, Homeschool 9th gr, sweetie!
    T - pc 10yo son - SID, 4rd gr. Inventor
    Dh - my best friend
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    http://www.conductdisorders.com/foru...evaluation-10/

  3. #3
    Warrior Parent maril's Avatar
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    Re: Discharged; not good

    susiestar: Thanks for your support. I see from what you posted that other outpatient facilities might not have kept him after the first incident.

    We have an appointment with his pdoc this a.m.; we had stopped his meds with his doctor's approval and this is a followup to see how he is doing. His pdoc is our only hope right now. I have made contacts to others in recent weeks and no success.

    There are other issues going on at this time with him (school, home). My husband and I have to come up with a new plan; everything else has failed.
    GFG, son - Dx of ADHD, predominantly inattentive type; R/O anxiety disorder, NOS; H/O cannabis abuse. Young adult, who is experiencing growing pains
    DD - Adult on a good path, working FT
    DH and me - Long-time partners

  4. #4
    CD Hall of Fame Andy's Avatar
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    Re: Discharged; not good

    I am so sorry! Like Susiestar stated, this did not happen because of anything you did. Your phone calls had no impact on his being discharged. If the facility did not want your phone calls, they would have taken steps to end them. I am sure staff appreciate your requests to help GFG. In fact, those calls may have been why he wasn't discharged earlier. The facility saw the support he had and gave him another chance. Did the facility let you know that he was leaving campus? It really is a team effort between all facilities, parents, schools, docs, ect. to make this treatment a success.
    Andy

    Dh - married 23 years
    Me- 49 yrs old
    DD diva - 21 yr old daughter - hates mom less as each day goes

    GFG 15 yr old son dx with deep anxiety and migrane varient - 30 mg Citalopram (Celexa) for anxiety, Vitamin D, multi-vitamin, and vitamin B-2 for migrane, and 5 mg Amphetamine (Adderal) 3X per day for ADD
    Bichon Friese "diva puppy" DOB: 01/31/08
    Goldendoodle "sweet puppy" DOB: 05/17/10 - 03/27/11 , lots of tears!
    "Chewy" DOB: 03/18/11 (sweet puppy's sister )

  5. #5
    Warrior Parent maril's Avatar
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    Re: Discharged; not good

    Thanks, Adrianne. I honestly don't remember the staff telling me he had been stepping out prior to last night. I'm running on empty right now, so some of my recollections are a bit foggy; so much has been going wrong in our home lately. I was up till 1:30 a.m. last night waiting for GFG to come in and am exhausted today; we've tried/continue to try giving consequences for breaking curfew, in addition to locking him out one night last week (he has not had a house key for quite some time); unfortunately, in the wee hours of the morning on that night, he broke a door down to get in. As well, we continue to reach out for help. Obviously, DH and I have not been too successful to this point but will follow through with referrals pdoc gave us today as another attempt to help GFG and our family.

    Your kind words are helpful and much appreciated. The support you all send helps ease some of the stress! I am grateful.
    GFG, son - Dx of ADHD, predominantly inattentive type; R/O anxiety disorder, NOS; H/O cannabis abuse. Young adult, who is experiencing growing pains
    DD - Adult on a good path, working FT
    DH and me - Long-time partners

  6. #6
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    Re: Discharged; not good

    IF they discharged him due to your calls, they properly had something to hide. Just a couple of weeks ago a rehab settled for $450,000. Back when the case first appeared the owners and the referral agency attacked the mother of one of the teens for constant interruption and asking questions.

    I believe that any program; inpatient or outpatient should operate with a open door policy when it comes to the familie of the person in the program. I don't believe in any period without contact to the family "to adjust". I don't believe that communication face-to-face with parents is something to be earned as part of the program. Of course if they are placed against their will, it could be expected that they will try to get the parents to pull them. There is four strategies for that: Denial, guilt trips, anger or Negotiation. As for all four there is only one answer. Go there, demand one-to-one talk uninterrupted, disapprove the complaint with valid arguments. I found a good site for that.

    However I don't think that is the reason. I think that the fact that he broke the rules in this program made them think that he was not ready to quit his addiction. Generally I don't believe can fix a problem they do not acknowledge. So in order not to waste the staff's time and money for those you pays for the treatment, they had to let him go.

    Let him home, but do not take responsibility for his choices. He must take the consequences for his choices. That means no money, access to car or anything else that could enable him to continue his addiction. If he choose to drop out and get a job in order to maintain alcohol consumption, which I now understand is a problem by this agegroup in your country, then it must be so. Just don't help him in any way. I pray that he at sometime finds the strength to make other choices and give you my full support.

  7. #7
    Warrior Parent maril's Avatar
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    Re: Discharged; not good

    Quote Originally Posted by Rotsne View Post
    Let him home, but do not take responsibility for his choices. He must take the consequences for his choices. That means no money, access to car or anything else that could enable him to continue his addiction.
    I agree with you, and we do restrict his access to cash. I am working around using cash for necessities by using gift cards or certificates and personal checks.

    I thank you for your very kind words and support.
    Last edited by maril; 12-16-2008 at 12:21 PM.
    GFG, son - Dx of ADHD, predominantly inattentive type; R/O anxiety disorder, NOS; H/O cannabis abuse. Young adult, who is experiencing growing pains
    DD - Adult on a good path, working FT
    DH and me - Long-time partners

  8. #8
    Moderator DDD's Avatar
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    Re: Discharged; not good

    You have my caring suppport. As one who twice received unexpected calls informing me that PC/GFG was discharged and had to be picked up immediately, I recall the shock. I also recall my tears (shared only with the CD family) and my fear that my "best efforts" were being thwarted. Residential two hours away didn't help much.

    Addiction is a God awful affliction and that it can grip teens and ruin their lives in a New York minute still shocks me. Nice kids. Loving families. High IQ's. Multiple talents. Seven years after it began...I still don't completely accept it.

    A hug and a prayer are sent your way. DDD
    DH & I have raised our 25 yr.old grandson. At 14 he turned to pot & booze to cope with problems. He's a GFG#1. In 2005 he fell off a balcony, had brain surgery and has TBI effects. His recovery is very stressful. Time will tell if he ends up GFG or PC. Our GFG#2 is 21 and now lives with his GFGmom. He's ADHD, AS, BP plus. DH and I have 6 children and 11 grands. Yikes!

  9. #9
    Warrior Parent maril's Avatar
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    Re: Discharged; not good

    DDD: Your words mean more than you can imagine. I am sorry also that you and your PC/GFG have had to suffer much.

    What makes it even more difficult is that this is the one treatment in which GFG was having some success! He actually participated and seemed to do well, according to the staff. Maybe, just maybe, I can talk him into attending NA meetings; I have a booklet with local listings we received from the staff at the partial program.

    This morning, GFGs pdoc stated that, obviously, he is still in need of treatment (D&A program); now what?
    GFG, son - Dx of ADHD, predominantly inattentive type; R/O anxiety disorder, NOS; H/O cannabis abuse. Young adult, who is experiencing growing pains
    DD - Adult on a good path, working FT
    DH and me - Long-time partners

  10. #10
    CD Hall of Fame rejectedmom's Avatar
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    Re: Discharged; not good

    It might be time to concider checking him into a locked down RTC while lyou can. I have no other advice other than to get the help now while you have legal control. Once they turn 18 it is so hard to get anything done. Even if they are agreeable there are very few residential programs available to adults with little income.
    PC1 daughter age age 37 closed head brain injury dec 2010. Severe headaches and other neurological sympoms. Getting better slowly still cannot work. Married mother of two
    GFG#1 Mood disorder, narcissistic,aggressive in the past Married, one son.
    PC/GFG age 30 adopted College grad recently started having delusions. Moved back home.
    GFG#2: Age 23. Adopted DXs: ADHD, ODD, RAD, Later Dx's= BP, BMR, conduct disorder, depression, ex(?)-drugs & alcohol. Multiple assaults and thefts. In prison.

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