1,000 Nights Stuck in a System That is Failing Kids

The U.S. Department of Justice has accused Rhode Island of warehousing children at Bradley Hospital, the state’s only pediatric psychiatric facility. Families hope the investigation means that help for their children is finally on the way

Share
1,000 Nights Stuck in a System That is Failing Kids
Copy

For the past six years, Mary and Michael McDonough have spent more time visiting their daughter Rachel than living with her.

Rachel, a chatty 15-year-old with wavy blonde hair and a love of animals, has been institutionalized for her behavioral disabilities since she was 9, mostly at Bradley Hospital, an acute-care psychiatric hospital for children in East Providence. After a dozen admissions there each lasting for months, Rachel currently lives at a residential treatment center in Massachusetts.

Despite repeated efforts by Mary McDonough to care for Rachel at home, the teen always ended up back at Bradley, the only pediatric psychiatric hospital in Rhode Island.

“She essentially lived there,” Mary McDonough said in an interview with Globe Rhode Island and Rhode Island PBS. “She was there more than she was home.”

This story is part of a collaboration between the Boston Globe Rhode Island and Rhode Island PBS. To access the Globe online for free for 30 days, sign up here (no credit card required).

In part two of Possibly’s series on the dairy industry, we’re turning our attention to an age-old method used to efficiently store cheese
A $15.2 billion budget approved by the House would raise taxes on millionaires, create a state inspector general’s office and preserve Rhode Island’s 2033 renewable energy target
The Pulitzer Prize-winning scholar of the American Revolution taught at Brown University for decades and was one of the country’s most influential historians
The legislation comes after a scathing report that detailed decades of clergy abuse and potential cover-ups within the Diocese of Providence
Why is progress on the state’s top hurdles so elusive?
A new state report lays out the numbers behind a familiar problem: fewer doctors, longer waits and growing barriers to care