Question:
Our daughter is sixteen and has been dealing with depression from a traumatic event that happened to her when she was eight. We have had her in various counseling therapies over the last year and a half. She tried to commit suicide earlier this year. The Gospel has been a great source of strength for my husband and me, even though we are under tremendous stress. We are still paying some of her medical bills. She is now living with a family member hours from us. We feel she isn’t ready to be home because she would not be safe. So, we are contemplating residential treatment that could last several months. We only have a short time until she is a legal adult and feel this is our last chance to get her help. My husband and I don’t always agree that she needs outside help or on what kind of treatment to look for. The cost for the right placement for her is mind-boggling. We would have to see if our insurance would pay anything, and then still ask our family and our church for help. This has put a lot of strain on our not-super-strong marriage. We don’t even know if our daughter would cooperate with a residential treatment program. What do you suggest?
Answer:
I can see how worried you are watching your daughter march toward adulthood while she still needs so much help and support. I’m glad she’s safe with family, even though it’s not a viable long-term solution. You’ve obviously expended tremendous effort to help your daughter, so I recognize there are no easy solutions. I hope I can provide some insight that might help guide your future efforts.
Since I don’t know the specifics of the type of therapy she’s received, I’m going to make some suggestions you may want to consider. Sometimes when an adolescent is a danger to herself, all of the treatment resources are used up to keep her safe (such as hospitalization and behavioral plans). Even though these efforts are essential, treating the underlying trauma often gets neglected.
Intensive outpatient trauma treatment works best when an individual has a strong support network of family, clergy, friends, and professionals to provide ongoing stability during the treatment process. If she’s safe enough to live with your family member for the time being, would she have the support needed to intensify her outpatient therapy?
If she’s already tried an intensive program of outpatient trauma therapy, such as Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR), Lifespan Integration, or Somatic Experiencing, then inpatient care may be the only way to provide her an environment where she can have adequate supervision and daily trauma treatment.
You’re right that inpatient treatment options are costly. Obviously, if it’s a true life and death emergency, money becomes a secondary consideration. I don’t know your daughter or her full treatment needs, but make sure whatever program you consider includes a trauma component. Unfortunately, some programs are so behavioral in nature that they miss the underlying causes and only focus on extinguishing problematic behaviors.
While you can’t know if she’ll cooperate in an inpatient setting, you do know that she’s struggling to function in a regular home environment. There may be no other option for her. Running her back to the behavioral unit at the hospital every time she’s suicidal is not going to address anything other than acute stabilization.
Hopefully you have a trusted team made up of people who know and love your daughter and who can help you make this critical decision. I don’t know if you have a trusted therapist, church leader, other family members, school teachers, or others who can talk through these options with you. Don’t make this decision in isolation with all of your fears and anxieties running the show. People are willing to help in a multitude of ways. You might even find Meridian Magazine readers offering support in the comments section by suggesting facilities or other types of ideas to help your daughter. I know there are many others who face similar dilemmas for their older teens.
You can connect with Geoff Steurer at:
Website: www.geoffsteurer.com
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About the Author
Geoff Steurer is a licensed marriage and family therapist in private practice in St. George, Utah. He is the co-author of “Love You, Hate the Porn: Healing a Relationship Damaged by Virtual Infidelity”, host of the podcast, “From Crisis to Connection”, and creates online relationship courses. He earned degrees from Brigham Young University and Auburn University. He is married to Jody Young Steurer and they are the parents of four children.
The advice offered through Geoff Steurer’s column is educational and informational in nature and is provided only as general information. It is not meant to establish a therapist-patient relationship or offer therapeutic advice, opinion, diagnosis treatment or to establish a standard of care. Although Geoff Steurer is a trained psychotherapist, he is not functioning in the role of a licensed therapist by writing this column, but rather using his training to inform these responses. Thus, the content is not intended to replace independent professional judgment. The content is not intended to solicit clients and should not be relied upon as medical or psychological advice of any kind or nature whatsoever. The information provided through this content should not be used for diagnosing or treating a mental health problem or disease. The information contained in these communications is not comprehensive and does not include all the potential information regarding the subject matter, but is merely intended to serve as one resource for general and educational purposes.
Abbie VianesMarch 29, 2024
I highly suggest neurofeedback for trauma as it can heal ptsd. Be sure to get a technician using the Othmer method as it has over 20 years of research behind it. I am a trained professional counselor and trained as a neurofeedback provider. It truly is amazing. It is not yet covered by most insurance and can be pricey but the outcomes are so phenomenal.
Debbi M.March 29, 2024
We had that horrible, relationship strain yrs ago with our 17 year old daughter. She was so oppositional that she was placed at an adolescent hospital treatment facility.. Insurance paid but determined she could be moved to a residential facility, which insurance was not going to pay for and a long waiting period...She did outpatient for a while. She was rather a black hole in our family with our other children getting pretty resentful of her. We more or less just waited her out until she was18 and left for a few years--also sad. She did get somewhat better, but had several pregnancies--one adoption and two she kept, both by different dads. As she got older, we butted heads and she lived with us solely because of her kids.She was not de pressive, but did try one time to take an overdose of aspirin. Fortunately we could get support from our friends and family. Please know you are not alone, and take care of your marriage because spouses are also hurting, and our marriage needs to come first. I remember so many sleepless nights waiting for her to come home, and sometimes wishing she wouldn't! Mostly praying so so much that she would not harm herself or others.