At the age of 5 in 1969 I was misdiagnosed with profound mental retardation and my parents were encourage to put me in a institution. They refused and raised me as a normal child. The doctors were wrong. I had ADHD and learning disabilities.. I was very smart in math and science. I earned degrees in psychology and counseling. I now work with people with autism.
@Cheryl-nz9ti9 ай бұрын
😢
@sinbadoakley19908 ай бұрын
I have autism and teachers doctors and my parents projected me as mentally retarded when it turned out I was capable of learning and now I live on my own and have a college degree
@Grammie-hk5vb8 ай бұрын
❤
@deniseroe58918 ай бұрын
I was/am ADHD, but in the 60’s you were a “bad kid”. I was given something, I don’t remember what it was other than a tiny green capsule. My only son is the same, but he had the Ritalin and Adderal along with Welbruton. His doctor actually prescribed the same for me! I pulled him out of public school and homeschooled him from 7th to graduation. He is very smart and always was. Too smart for his own good sometimes. His daughter who is three is going to be just like him. So glad your parents didn’t listen and you proved the doctors wrong. Congratulations!
@rockandrollnana8 ай бұрын
It's truly truly sad, the pro didn't see the whole picture or for see the possibility of over crowding
@conniemiller97898 ай бұрын
This documentary literally broke my heart. I have two sisters that were both mentally challenged, one from birth, the other from brain damage after birth. Our mother never gave voice to putting either of them in a 'home.' They were raised by her and those of us that were older and could help her, and stayed with Mom until the day that she died. They went to schools for 'special' kids where the learned to read and write and were taught life skills. They were happy, healthy, and well taken care of by family. They were loved.
@commonsense26808 ай бұрын
Bless you!
@felicityjohnston92768 ай бұрын
were,they died?
@jumperontheline8 ай бұрын
Connie said " I have two sisters ...", so no they're not dead. I think she used the past tense in reference to their childhoods as they are now adults.@@felicityjohnston9276
@bbeloveth53bahtgad378 ай бұрын
Thank you ma'am ❤️
@CMoore85397 ай бұрын
@@felicityjohnston9276No they lived at Home.
@QueenofMarine7 ай бұрын
That one woman who locked her daughter away in an institution and then continuously refuses to acknowledge any of the pain and suffering caused by that institution, despite mountains of evidence clearly laid out by multiple reputable sources and years of research, is exactly the type of person who made the institutionalized abuse of people with disabilities possible in the first place. Her willful ignorance is despicable and infuriating. Shameful.
@rosie-ella764 ай бұрын
YES!!! that's what I thought. sitting there looking very healthy and pretty wealthy, just talking about how fabulous this was..the best diet, the best care etc..delusional. you're right, this is the type of person that would definitely not want the neighbour's to know if they had a child that wasn't perfect ..and just concentrating on their youngest "normal " kid 🤬 gross.."I'm sure there were problems Dear.."that passive aggressive self preservation kicking in there so she has clean hands
@tinkabell14004 ай бұрын
IKR the woman who thought it was marvellous should be forced to live under the same circumstances as the patients and after a year of the worst things ever happening to her being her out then ask her if she still thinks the institution is heaven on earth
@robine63374 ай бұрын
She wants to be believed that, delusional
@corrinnacorrinna55724 ай бұрын
Would you believe this is very similiar to nursing homes today? Go visit one in off hours. You might be shocked.
@margaretr57014 ай бұрын
@@rosie-ella76 if the lady was as wealthy as she seemed to be, it would have been far better, kinder, for her to get private care for her daughter, preferably at home, but even in another home, would've been preferable over the institution.
@maurachapman41798 ай бұрын
Through Catholic Charities I volunteered in the 70's at a state hospital when I was in high-school. I saw things no 13 year old should see. But I also saw many good things and it inspired me to volunteer during every school break I had during high-school. It developed my empathy for humanity and set me on a career of human service throughout my working years and I tried to better the lives of people with challenges. In my retirement, I work as a receptionist at a nursing home. Volunteerism set my life on a path of helping others. Volunteer today.
@patriciaque1978 ай бұрын
😊👍💛✝️🕊
@deana82028 ай бұрын
God bless you.
@giorgismama80248 ай бұрын
Thank you for being a wonderful human who made a difference in many lives.
@manyplanets8 ай бұрын
God loves you!!! But you’re making the rest us look bad 😅😅😅
@felicityjohnston92768 ай бұрын
13 in highschool? unless your school had highschool in 7th grade rather than 9th grade....
@Carols-we8mi8 ай бұрын
I spent 10 years in an Asylum. It made my mental health worse. Sent into the community when it closed down was extremely traumatic. I knew nothing. I was alone in a society that had greatly changed and impacted me greatly.
@saggitarusspirit4018 ай бұрын
Sorry for your suffering, ❤
@Squeakslacombe8 ай бұрын
I remember they told me to go work in a workplace for peoples with disabilities cause I'm highly sensitive and not super fast in working. I thought 'ok, work is work' I worked there for 4 days. After those days I just looked for something else. Nobody understood why they sent me there to work.
@jackiemarini32037 ай бұрын
I hope you find peace.💌🙏
@a.azazagoth54137 ай бұрын
I hope that you have found some peace and take joy in the small things.
@wendymagee26017 ай бұрын
@@saggitarusspirit401❤
@maggiesfarm79709 ай бұрын
This is absolutely heartbreaking.
@susanwenzel66348 ай бұрын
I have a non verbal autistic granddaughter. Special needs people are so special. They have so much unconditional love and compassion. So called people without disabilities can learn so much from special needs. Yes they are a lot of work, but they are Gods special Angels.
@Saer-s9u8 ай бұрын
🕊💞
@xeekoliciiusghgggu11762 ай бұрын
Quite an assumption. Not all special needs people are kind.
@tarable7778Ай бұрын
I agree completely! We have a girl with down syndrome in church, they sit in front of us and she and I spend a lot of time just playing and talking, her mom asked me to stop during church so I asked if I could visit her. She said No, I keep her very close and do not know you. Makes perfect sense, I won’t let my young daughter go to a person house that I haven’t met and felt out the parents and household ways.
@tarable7778Ай бұрын
@@xeekoliciiusghgggu1176are you one of those your speaking of? Most special needs and disabled people are the nicest. I’ve met some that are angry because of their condition, I broke my back 5 surgeries fusion, and it’s only getting worse, the only the reason I am mad is because of my own body. That doesn’t mean I lash out at fully capable people, I just don’t have the time to deal with people that can’t understand true disability. Mine is only my back, imagine if it was your brain. Older people get mad because their bodies and brains are failing them. It’s a natural reaction to limitations.
@ella77198 ай бұрын
I work in a activities centre for people with disabilities and learning difficulties. Im so happy to say its the most loving, happy environment and i consider all customers my friends as they really truly are. Everyone is different and beautiful, no one deserves to be treated less than, its what makes us all unique.
@BLGirl-yq5fy8 ай бұрын
I agree with u Ella7719
@katiempojer4 ай бұрын
The best population I interned with adults who survived these places. I adored them all it was the best time
@aedenallends74 ай бұрын
These asylums make people sicker. Stuffing medications down their throats antipsychotic medications and whatever seizure of medication that weren't warranted without diagnosis I went the wrong diagnosis just guessing games it infuriates me
@aliciablanchard25008 ай бұрын
“You keep on badgering me you’re going to be wearing that bucket” 🤣🤣🤣 and she meant business!
@BekaB857 ай бұрын
Yes! That is about the only part of this documentary that gave me a little smile.
@midget_princess22008 ай бұрын
Imagine how many lost opportunities of having good healthy, happy, productive members of society there has been. Give people love, respect and the opportunity to learn and be challenged in a nurturing environment you'll be surprised just how much they surpass your expectations and massively surprise you!!!!
@aliciashanks52397 ай бұрын
👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
@roadlesstraveled347 ай бұрын
I live 20 min from Pennhurst and all I can say is, there but for the grace of God. I'm 39, autistic, and I have chronic depression and pervasive suicidal ideation. It's an awful way to live but knowing that just a few decades before I was born I would have likely been sent here for God only knows how long? It makes my skin crawl.
@janetwestwood91947 ай бұрын
🥺✌️❣️
@Kittycat-it7td7 ай бұрын
Love you
@Kittycat-it7td7 ай бұрын
Love you
@WayneAmoss-l7z7 ай бұрын
41:09 41:12
@Cedawood7 ай бұрын
@@Kittycat-it7td love you 😺
@purpleangel36868 ай бұрын
As a Mother of a disabled child born in 1991, In Pa.. This breaks my heart and I thank the Lord everyday that we now have services for our children. My daughter is now 32, still lives with me and can not drive. She is a strong Christian women and has held jobs, she still struggles with that. The people that work with her are kind and caring. I am so proud of her progress and truly grateful for those who help her.
@Goober_gobbler8 ай бұрын
As much as its a good thing that these institutions were closed, allot of children with mental health issues and disabilities arnt getting any help at all. I live in Canada where we have the same issue, and it may actually be worse. We may not be actively abusing people much anymore, but we are neglecting and ignoreing them. I am very happy your daughter has gotten help and is thriving! Hopefully everyone will be able to do as well as her someday
@purpleangel36868 ай бұрын
@@Goober_gobbler Amen to that!
@Elizabeth-y7u8 ай бұрын
Mt favorite person in this interview is the well dressed suit and tie man in the wheelchair who they put in a crib. What a sweetheart 😘
@commonsense26808 ай бұрын
I know, he is such a fine and smart gentleman with such a sweet face. Just look at his amazing memory and ability to recall, he deserved to always live a very dignified life not stuck in some crib, I am so sorry!
@silversmoke68 ай бұрын
He seems so so intelligent. I cant imagine what torture that place must have been for him
@FleetwoodCaddy598 ай бұрын
Same I’m very taken with him.He’s just darling.I know he’s a grown man with a perfectly fine brain but I want to take care of him like a child.
@beefykeith487 ай бұрын
i too noticed his attire!! very well dressed!
@silversmoke67 ай бұрын
@@FleetwoodCaddy59 oh that is so so condescending
@deniseg-hill17309 ай бұрын
Closed down in 1987 after investigations uncovered children strapped to cribs and locked in cages, patients left naked in their own waste in bare dayrooms. Residents endured abuse from fellow patients and staff.
@mariaconnolly66729 ай бұрын
😢So sad 😭😭😭🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧
@kathrynwitte33989 ай бұрын
Yet the rich mother insists it “wasn’t that bad”. Whatever she needed to tell herself to get herself through the night. I don’t think she was capable of integrating the reality into her worldview, much less taking responsibility for accepting horrible advice to institutionalize her daughter because it was easy.
@heatherfling78208 ай бұрын
That’s horrible and heartbreaking
@tiasara59678 ай бұрын
Reagan had mental institutions closed down in the 80s, that is why. They were literally sent to the streets and “crime” rose intensely in those towns, if you can call them crimes.
@leannecomerford82618 ай бұрын
I think you are mistaking it for Willowbrook. Geraldo snuck in and recorded the things you mentioned
@roxanpierson95418 ай бұрын
Every Saturday, patients were scrubbed down with hose and scrub brush! I worked with Pennhurst patients in the 1970s when the institutions were emptied out.
@janetcarbone42138 ай бұрын
Sadly you are correct. We used slabs but got modernized bathing equipment with lifts in the late 80s. In the 30’s -70’s there weren’t enough staff and the facilities were old and antiquated. There were just too many people there who needed a ton of care. You tried Thanks for that
@OneStubbornLass2 ай бұрын
So this is a genuine question, I’m not saying anything against you as a whole… you sound like you are kind and tried your best with little resources that was given to you. I’m just wondering why no one said anything to authorities? Why didn’t anyone report it? Also, why are so many people in utter denial about the whole situation? I’m autistic, if I was born 7 years before I prolly would’ve been in there. I just want to know why didn’t the good rally together and report it? I’m not saying you guys didn’t, I just don’t hear about it.
@Mar-vq9tx15 күн бұрын
@@OneStubbornLass yes , my opinion is the same
@kaebmunson9 ай бұрын
I’m already emotional like 10 minutes in as I used to work at a group home for DD adults and fell so in love with those ladies. One had been in an institution as a young girl and had burns and so much trauma. I left the home I worked at and the company changed hands after and the suddenly new company won’t let us see them. For two of my ladies the workers were their only family (old and new). Breaks my heart. Love you CP and JG. Still talk to them on the phone when I’m allowed. We need more person centered care homes that focus on them being in the community and building and keeping connections
@theirmom47238 ай бұрын
If the two you mention do not have guardians, and their phone conversations are restricted, then their basic rights are being violated. The company needs to be turned in to the local IDD authority aka LIDDA. That is something you can do. You can make the call. If you worked for a company providing services, then you should have that number ingrained in your memory.
@psychedelicpython8 ай бұрын
@kaebmunson - your story reminds me a group home I volunteered at when I was in high school. Around 1980 there was an all women’s group home about 5 miles from where I lived . All of the ladies had Down syndrome. I was 16 or 17 years old at the time. I would visit them at least a couple of times a week. Quite a few of us would play the card game Uno but I never won because they were always playing the draw four card and skip card on me. LOL! One evening we finger painted and I did a house with a chimney. A couple of other ladies painted a house too, but they added trees, clouds, birds, a sun, and much more. All of the ladies in the group home were amazing and smart! I loved them all.
@kaebmunson8 ай бұрын
@@theirmom4723 yes my coworkers who stayed until after the transition to the new company have already reported the issues to the authorities (bc they had first hand knowledge of the charges while I left before). There is an open investigation I believe I don’t know if the status. I should have clarified that in my post. I love these women very much and trust the coworkers who are involved implicitly
@kaebmunson8 ай бұрын
@@psychedelicpython I love that story so much reminds me of my experiences even the games played. Those ladies were some of my favorite humans ever ❤️
@jennyrose22008 ай бұрын
What I want to know is how many are living in misery on the streets as homeless people? A safe place to live should be a right for anyone who can't manage on their own. Now there are group homes, in communities but people get kicked out of those and often end up in the prison system. Fact is, nobody wants to admit that the solution has not been found.
@alisonmercer59468 ай бұрын
Oh the solution is available it just isn't implemented.
@stephaniechambell14938 ай бұрын
That’s what I was thinking 🤔
@monalee92487 ай бұрын
It's all about money.
@MarilynOPossum2 ай бұрын
Locking people up against their will is not right.
@sandrafunk55502 ай бұрын
I know in ohio, there is group homes as well as they can get their own place to rent. And have case workers and staff that help them with daily living. I know there is probably many who don't get the help they need or don't know about it or even understand how to. Which is so sad.
@TheMartinSan9 ай бұрын
The unimaginable suffering so many ppl have had forced upon them by wilfully ignorant or plain abusive individuals is worse than any horror movie out there. Makes one embarrassed to belong to the same species...
@janetcarbone42138 ай бұрын
DID YOU 🫵🏻 WORK IN ONE?? Let me introduce myself as one of those horrible individuals who did. I just spent my days in direct care, case management making sure the individuals who lived there had all the services they required. I had 24/7 jobs that required me to come to work in snow storms, in the middle of the night as well as clinical services where my department worked with our guys to help them re enter the community on and on. I worked with others who did the same thing. They cared. Did those things happen? Yes they did shamefully. But I suggest you look in the mirror along with the other bleeding hearts. It was society that allowed this. It is better now thankfully. But did you know that people actually died when they closed facilities because they were too frail to tolerate the change in the environment? Yeah while all of the group home providers were celebrating and holding their hand out for state and federal dollars- some people died due to their lack of knowledge or preparation. Today there are those who are doing wonderfully. These people probably should have NEVER been in the facility at all. I’m thankful for that. But there are those kept in group homes that are virtually as segregated as they were in places like Pennhurst either due to severe behavioral or physical challenges. So before you hit the keyboard know what you are talking about. There is still a way to go. This story isn’t over yet
@alisonmercer59468 ай бұрын
And still happening today
@Chadrocker538 ай бұрын
YES! SAD…..
@tinahardman87939 ай бұрын
I am a person with disabilities, I have ADHD and Cogitive impairment. We don’t call it Mental retardation anymore. But how people treat us with disabilities is beyond comprehension. Like it hurts me to see those with disabilities treated the way they were. Like it’s horrible how they lived back then, with disabilities.
@georginacat76679 ай бұрын
Dont you dare try and align your struggle to the abuse suffered by people in these institutions you have you ever experienced the kind of abuse that they suffered. At the very beginning of the video it states we use the term mental retardation in the historic meaning, not as the now defunct and offensive term.
@naelyneurkopfen97419 ай бұрын
It should still be called mental retardation. When you know the actual meanng of words and stop putting your feels before facts, you have never outcomes. All this candy pants bs gets in the way of actual progress.
@MaternalUnit8 ай бұрын
@@georginacat7667please don't jump on someone who is sharing her own experiences and expressing empathy for disabled people from the past! So inappropriate. There was nothing at all wrong with her comment.
@maurachapman41798 ай бұрын
@@georginacat7667 Who are you to judge this person who lives with challenges? We are all here who saw this crime against humanity.
@theirmom47238 ай бұрын
@@georginacat7667 Really?!?! You have no right to accuse this person of not knowing. People with disabilities are still abused today.
@maryansel9328 ай бұрын
Sandra's mother seems to be in a great deal of denial about her daughter's reality. I worked in state institutions for several years. There was nothing idyllic about them. Abuse was common, not necessarily by just staff, but by other residents as well. Overcrowding and underfunding played a role in the abject circumstances of life in these institutions. Rodents and insects fared better there.
@tammiemcdowell19207 ай бұрын
I think it all boiled down to the fact that the mom was embarrassed by her daughter and didn’t want to raise her.
@SuryaNycole5 ай бұрын
I came to the comments to agree, I don't know if her being with her bio mother would have been worse. Terrifying and terrible that she had no choice but torment and abuse
@bbrabow1gmail5 ай бұрын
If you worked in a facility AND didn't report the abuse you claim occured...your liable morally and legally
@lighthousehg7 ай бұрын
As a mother of a son with cerebral palsy and cognitive delay, this broke my heart beyond measure. I saw my son in those children and adults trapped in those cribs. I saw my son in that gentleman in the suit that spoke about the abuse he endured. I cant imagine walking away from my child like that mother did. It raisinga child with severe mental and physical disabilities difficult, yes! He is my son first and my love and commitment to him supercedes any of my own comfort. I just dont understand her.
@paulaweadon81308 ай бұрын
Excellent documentary. A different perspective from everyone involved. Each person had a unique story. It's unfortunate that mental institutions were abusive to so many already suffering, and the criteria for being "put" in a mental institution was horribly abused as well. 15 years ago I had two psychotic episodes back to back. I went to two different hospitals. They call them "stress centers". It was a sad and terrifying time in my life. My experience doesn't come close to these people. As I listened to each one tell their stories, I was amazed by their spirits. The human spirit is miraculous. For all of the poor souls who never knew freedom in life, I hope they found it in the after life. Life isn't fair or just - its random and chaotic. If you manage to find a sliver of peace in life, you're better off than most.
@commonsense26808 ай бұрын
So well said, thank you!
@gillysmusic8 ай бұрын
As a child I lived near a 'Mental Home' as it was called then. We were supposed to be scared of the poor souls who wandered around on a Saturday afternoon. I remember being very young and looking into their eyes, and saw desperate loneliness and unhappiness, and even at that age felt very sorry for them but not being allowed to voice that. Poor people, I still remember them now. this was the '50s. I believe many were just depressed or a little intellectually challenged and definitely did not belong in that awful place. Thank God things have moved on since then.
@corrinnacorrinna55724 ай бұрын
Not really. It's just moved to a more lucrative population, the elderly.😢
@kimbaronio67058 ай бұрын
In 1983 I was a manager in a group home with 3 residents from Pennhurst. I visited them there prior to their release and I was horrified at the conditions. Those 3 people were very important to me and myself and my staff gave them the life they deserved.
@jacobyshaddix328 ай бұрын
As a person who has cognitive impairment, I'm glad these places are shut down.
@hannahrichards25268 ай бұрын
Heartbreaking i will never understand how some people can mistreat others.
@G59GAMbIno9999 ай бұрын
Humans are something else ...
@MoonLover19179 ай бұрын
This is just heart breaking 💔
@Catherine_AM8 ай бұрын
We must continue our fight for everyone's human rights - teach everyone to fight for their human rights! I had the opportunity and pleasure to work with survivors of Pineland Farm...the protective behaviors never went away; but, we made sure to find joy. We've come a long way, but at an incredibly slow pace and so much red tape.
@stuartinnes819 ай бұрын
From sarah .I.worked voluntary in a hospital in the 80s ,my foster mum was.a.senior nurse there and was the Head of the ward ,we ended up taking in a resident (his father was the last person to be hung in the uk )who was physically and mentally unable to.care.for him.self I spent alot of time with him and he ended up being able to communicate using a towel and balloon then do art .the difference in him due to one to one support was unbelievable. My brother who had dyslexia and learning difficulties was regarded as educationally subnormal a term used in the 70sand 80s was sent to boarding school till he was 12 .luckily things have changed although there's still alot of ignorance and stigma .my eldest works as an equalities officer for the NHS to make sure that people recieve the proper care for their needs and what they deserve . My eldest has ahad ,social anxiety and dyslexia ,my youngest dyslexia and anxiety .I myself have ptsd and have had mental health issues for 44 yrs plus physical disabilities including in the brain .I've been in mental health units and they are thankfully alot different .
@maurachapman41798 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing your story.
7 ай бұрын
I have 43 episodes at the Brattleboro Retreat in my 22 years of life. I have been down every tunnel, and seen every floor except T4. I could know that entire campus and building like a blueprint, it lives like that in my mind, almost like it is engraved there. Memories and rooms that will never go away. I am a person with CPTSD and Autism and lived my life institutionalized from the age of 5 to adulthood with few free patches in between. Dark places like this still exist. When I was 16 I was strapped to a restraint chair for mouthing off to our charge nurse, a floor staff argued with her for 20 minutes to get me out of the chair, which she saw from a window, the clear discoloration as the straps were cutting circulation off to my hands and I cried and cried in pain for days after still. These places get away with a lot of things society is blinded to. It is 2024 and it still happens.
@adriennenelson7597 ай бұрын
I worked in a group home and one of the ladies I cared for spent a substantial portion of her young life in an institution. Due to lack of stimulus, she banged her head against the wall there and became completely blind. She was born with Down Syndrome and because more disabled by living there. When she was rehoused into a group home, she learned sign language but continued to display many institutional behaviors such as rocking. Years later, I became the mother of a son who has developmental and physical delays. My heart could not hurt more for these people who suffered. I would stop at nothing to make sure my son is treated equally in every facet of his life.
@nicolegriffin99697 ай бұрын
How did she learn sign language if she was blind?
@adriennenelson7597 ай бұрын
@@nicolegriffin9969 By feeling the hands of the person showing her I would guess. She already knew it when I started. She knew a limited number of signs.
@margaretr57014 ай бұрын
down Syndrome people, are some of the nicest human beings on earth. They thrive with attention and care, are kind and affectionate to those they love.
@AbiBrown-q9k9 ай бұрын
they may have all different disabilities however, the most ill was the one looking after them. appalling society to treat them less than human because they were different. Penhurst such a beautiful structure and yet inside this building horrors occurred 24-7
@summertyme61627 ай бұрын
Our school had "field trips" there each year. My class went in 1981 (approximately). The person taking our small group around accidentally took us in the room where adults were in cribs. As soon as we were in the room they realized it was a place we were not supposed to be in. They quickly ushered us back out. The absolute worst field trip ever
@PumpkinPatchVintage8 ай бұрын
Curious when this documentary and the interviews were made. The last of the patients were discharged in the late 1980s; almost 40 years ago. I’m just trying to work out the timeline and ages of the participants in this film. Thank you!
@tiasara59678 ай бұрын
Rose kennedy was also withheld at birth, the dr told nurse to cross the mother’s legs and wait for him because he wouldn’t get paid if she was born without his presence and that is how she was braindamaged and sent away for destructive lobotomy. That was common practice. I cannot even imagine the pain let alone the damage it caused. 😢
@alisonmercer59468 ай бұрын
I never knew they'd do that. I shouldn't be surprised though.
@annmarieschantz97248 ай бұрын
@@alisonmercer5946its so heartbreaking!! They treat animals better than that!!! What a horrible life for so many. 😢😮❤
@QueenofMarine7 ай бұрын
@@annmarieschantz9724No, sadly we treat animals so, so much worse.
@jamba6226 ай бұрын
The only behavior her father considered as requiring institutionalization was “promiscuity”. This from a man who along with all his sons cheated on their wives beyond what most could even imagine. He wanted to hide her away because he didn’t want his son’s political aspirations to be hindered. That’s why she wasn’t institutionalized til adulthood.
@PATRICIAInmon-t5b4 ай бұрын
@@jamba622Then acted like they were such good people.Such a disgrace
@heatherjackson25209 ай бұрын
That mother is making me sick. she can't just apologize to her daughter for locking her up in that horrible place for having ADHD? but she's going to make all these fake excuses like that place was rainbows and fairy tales. does she think everybody else is lying?? that the state that shut them down finally after years and years and years of reported abuse is just lying? Just apologize to your daughter!!
@MsAdventure5318 ай бұрын
Her social life and marriage was more important
@cicada388 ай бұрын
It's eye opening to see how people will sugar coat something that they didn't experience for themselves. I guarantee she saw things that she knew where vile, but she turned her head and thought about what events she would be attending in her wonderland. Out of sight, out of mind.
@angeelee92778 ай бұрын
I can't stand her. She is either in denial or just plan out evil
@debbieheidebrecht66528 ай бұрын
As I was watching the documentary I was thinking and feeling the same thing. She is in denial forsure.
@lisac95688 ай бұрын
She really irritated me as well. She wears her ‘rose colored glasses’
@shawnaallen59782 ай бұрын
I want to hug all these beautiful people. My heart aches that they went through this. And the families that "oh it was wonderful"... No way you believe that
@sapphirerain709 ай бұрын
“She had no problems” it wasn’t that she had no problems,you were too concerned for your own. You were her problem.
@franceslynch88158 ай бұрын
The minute I heard this woman speak....'she was well looked after; the staff were dedicated; they had better medical care; all places have problems'...I thought this woman is willfully blind, she does not want to know what her daughter suffered.
@theirmom47238 ай бұрын
@@franceslynch8815 As a mom of 2, with moderate to profound IDD (Mental retardation) and epilepsy, I totally agree with your comment. I kept making remarks to this woman every time she opened her mouth. She was too busy worrying about her perfect home.
@franceslynch88158 ай бұрын
@@theirmom4723 👍😅❤️
@pattiscott55498 ай бұрын
That women was the Vice President of something with Pennhurst, naturally she would say that things were great, I'm sorry but her daughter was treated like a v.i.p. without a doubt, she did not want to look beyond that, her daughter was being taken care of, doesn't matter about the rest, she probably never took a step on any of the wards. She was able to put her child into a private setting when it came time to move her out of the institution. There is absolutely no way that the very very limited staff they had there to take care of that many individuals with extensive needs could possibly take care of them period, even the most gifted staff available, it's just not humanly possible. The institution itself is responsible for how the facility was run and I'm sure there were abusers but did they fire them ? Or did anyone really manage anything? They needed lots and lots more caregivers and just maybe it could have survived with what it took to take good care of these beautiful patients.
@maryansel9328 ай бұрын
@@franceslynch8815 I agree; she saw what she wanted to see.
@MaternalUnit8 ай бұрын
I remember in Texas in the mid 1980s when institutions like Pennhurst were closed. It was done at the behest of the governor (a Democrat - it was a different world then 😅). There wasn't an adequate plan for what to do with all the residents of state institutions. Many who had no family that could take them were simply put on buses and let off in downtown Houston, with no or very little money, no change of clothes, etc. They became the homeless of Houston. There isn't an easy answer to what should be done. There needs to be more money and more thought given to ways people with disabilities can be cared for. My husband has a relative who has spent his life in one of the remaining institutions in Texas. It's very nice, and he's happy there. Nothing like Pennhurst was. There need to be some places for people who have nowhere else to go and need more help than a group home can give them.
@theirmom47238 ай бұрын
I am from Texas...there is more than one institution still open. Which one are you referring to? Brenham State School is still in operation, Richmond State School, and a few others I can not remember their names. Then you still Austin State Hospital. Getting into these institutions isn't as easy as before the change to Home and Community Based Services. Don't argue with me. I am a Texas mom of 2 receiving HCS. I have over 30 years dealing with the system for individuals with IDD and other Disabilities.
@missg.59408 ай бұрын
Same thing in Ontario. Closed with promises of alternate supports in the community. Did not happen. Many mentally ill homeless, violent incidences some adults had lived for decades in these facilities, then entire lives destroyed.😢
@deana82028 ай бұрын
They put several in a nursing home I worked at. You could tell they had suffered.
@samanthaginnifer73748 ай бұрын
The OP did say ONE of the last institutions in Texas. I read it wrong at first too @@theirmom4723
@judymelton12238 ай бұрын
It was President Regan that shut down the institutions. And I am a Republican and think he was a great president but he missed the mark there
@chellepb8 ай бұрын
I have worked in care all my life n never would treat anyone like this , n i have seen. Some awlful things . Everyone deserves respect n love xx
@sissyhippie97999 ай бұрын
So sad but facts ! 😢 I’m proud to say God sent our family amazing little boy that has down syndrome! When I was younger, they used to institutionalize them. I am so proud to say that he is flourishing and he is great. But he’s nonverbal. We know what he wants when he makes the sounds. We know what he’s asking for when he looks at us, all you have to do is look in the soles of a human being, and you will see everything you need to see disabilities even go away. Institutionalize them is the wrong thing love them teach them understand them, and most importantly put them in all the love you have from God.
@weirdVampiressАй бұрын
I work as a caregiver for the developmentally and intellectually disabled and this documentary needs to be shown in every New Employee Orientation class. I work with so many staff that don’t care about the clients and I feel like this would either weed them out or make them more compassionate.
@Jacoe413Ай бұрын
As someone who's disabled and has learning disabilities. Videos like this make me thankful to be born when I was!
@cynthialemus25918 ай бұрын
I have been taking care of my daughter for all of her 25 years. I myself am physically disabled and my husband was in the Marine Corps and deployed all the time. I have never wanted to gave her anywhere but with me. Love turns burden into privilege.
@Veronica7058 ай бұрын
Cynthia, God bless you, your daughter and your husband.❤
@CPAndy-x5x7 ай бұрын
What if it's a boy who turns into a grown man who can't walk, tal, dress or toilet himself? You can't lift him. You can't bathe him. What would you do?
@cynthialemus25915 ай бұрын
@user-xi7gz6sz4w What does their gender have to do with anything? The state has several programs for this. My daughter is on social security. This helps to pay for a nurse to help me when it comes time to do the thing that I stuggle with on my own. I'm always there, but being in a wheelchair myself makes getting her in and out of tubs and vehicles difficult.
@catherinevineyard59424 ай бұрын
Heavens bless you and your family.
@amandahood94015 ай бұрын
Wow Sandra’s mom is in serious denial of what that place was! Geez, this is heartbreaking! 💔 🥹
@slow_momo5 ай бұрын
This is showing a very powerful contrast between the staff and patients perspectives. I really appreciate the juxtaposed views and I think it shows a lot of conversations need to be had to connect caregivers to the patients and their experience more.
@katiempojer4 ай бұрын
I am getting such joy seeing the people who left and are living vibrant lives, these people should have never been put into a place like this. They were just special education students and those with minor developmental delays
@debbieprivett18808 ай бұрын
God bless their precious innocent hearts.
@veronicathode14663 ай бұрын
I worked in a group home for people with DD that was one of the best jobs I had. It was very rewarding to see how the residents improved their skills and started to have self steam and feel good about themselves. To know that I helped them reach their goal, was very rewarding. I felt so much love for them.
@andriamsimpsonrussell8 ай бұрын
I worked with folks who were in Willowbrook shortly after the Willowbrook Decree was finalized. I've read dozens of histories of the folks that came from places like Pennhurst going back to the 40s and reading those were horrific.
@sunnyday71467 ай бұрын
This still happens today. People with disabilities, our elders, dementia patients etc. are neglected and abused. We have not found the proper checks and balances to keep people safe and treated with dignity. If you find a good place chances are you can’t afford it. I do not have an answer. Institutions and health care providers should be held accountable. Our people deserve the best care and protection.
@lupitasaenz68197 ай бұрын
I was working in a group home and saw an LVN and how she treated the clients. I talked the woman in charge and she didn’t listen to me. Things kept happening. I got fired but before I got fired I reported and when I was in the office where they were firing me I told them everything I saw and heard. I truly hope something was done
@flowerpower36185 ай бұрын
But we give away money to other countries for their wars and welcome into our country millions of the unvetted with gifts.
@jacquia.26068 ай бұрын
Sandra's mother has to believe Pennhurst was good or the guilt will eat her alive. Very sad for all involved.
@TJ-cr8id8 ай бұрын
Emaciated and malnourished in a crib but had the best medical care 🧐
@juliewillis78524 ай бұрын
This is so heart breaking, my daughter had epilepsy with dravet syndrome, each siesure put her development back, she was 11 when she passed away, with development of a two to four year old, I am so grateful she was not put in a place like these, to get miss treated
@MaternalUnit8 ай бұрын
I've toured Pennhurst. It's in Pennsylvania. The buildings are standing but in abandoned condition. Not all the buildings are safe to enter. They use the main building for a haunted house in October.
@RachaelClarkeClarke8 ай бұрын
Such fun
@dawnlove10148 ай бұрын
I work for a company that keeps those with IDD in their own homes, living their best life. I can't even imagine my patients being treated this way 😢
@TJ-cr8id8 ай бұрын
I’d be embarrassed to be interviewed if I had worked there. The fact that they stayed indicated acceptance.
@ASaltyGhost7 ай бұрын
I imagine a good portion of them stayed to try to actually help people, do whatever good they could in a bad place.
@rachelmazza40797 ай бұрын
I imagine it’s more nuanced than that. they probably wanted to try to make it better for the people where they could.
@NNM-sc3rj7 ай бұрын
Your comment is naive.
@TJ-cr8id7 ай бұрын
@@NNM-sc3rj and yours is subjective idiot 🙄. No one asked you. You’re a nobody
@cynthiaconnors1835 ай бұрын
Perhaps most stayed because they needed income.
@Bettinasisrg8 ай бұрын
I don't understand how we can separate mental illness from physical illness? I mean our brain is part of our physical bodies and not too long ago the so called experts said epilepsy was a mental illness?! And even until the 1960s they did major surgeries on children without anesthesia because they believed kids couldn't feel pain!!?? I wholeheartedly believe some day we will finally figure out that all mental disorders can be diagnosed in the body as a physical disease. Until then we won't make much headway in helping people. Downs syndrome is a great example, it is a physical disorder due to chromosomal configuration and no amount of therapy will cure it but therapy can help emotionally in dealing with it. Just my thoughts. I hope everyone can be compassionate and kind towards others, you never know what others are dealing with and by just being kind it may help.
@brittanykaufman93948 ай бұрын
My great-aunt caught meningitis when she was 2 and never fully recovered. She would have epileptic seizures after that and her parents couldn't handle it so they put her in Pennhurst where she died at age 7😢
@drewharris77859 ай бұрын
That poor woman who said she missed Pennhurst! I'd love to know what she misses about it. Also the ones who said that it was a wonderful place, etc. Is are they all delusional or is something else going on there?
@marciajones29939 ай бұрын
They get institutionalised and don’t cope when they have to leave. 😢
@MaternalUnit8 ай бұрын
Pennhurst was built with the best of intentions. It was a beautiful campus with all sorts of activists for the patients. But the state legislature kept reducing the budget for Pennhurst while at the same time it became more and more overcrowded. There needed to be more places like it, and they needed to be well funded. Instead, it turned into a nightmare. I suspect the people who have good memories of Pennhurst are remembering before it got so bad.
@maurachapman41798 ай бұрын
She stated the things that were bad for her, but I think that she missed the community she enjoyed with others like her.
@payelizabethh8 ай бұрын
I think at the start Pennhurst was probably a wonderful thing but as things went it on it worsened
@franciscaetano38548 ай бұрын
I am a mother of 2 boys with cerebral paulsy. Age 4 and 7 BUT i will never put my 2 boys in a place like that. I raise my boys on my own with no help because I am the mother it is my responsibility to love them and to take care of them.Yes I struggle financially alot and I am very tierd when I go to bed at night but atleast I know my boys are safe and I will wake up with them next to me and I will c those 2 beautiful smiles and be able to hug them and kiss them and give them the love they need. Most parents put their children with a disability in a home during the week and weekends just go and visit them why because it is to much work for them to look after their own children and that is a disgrace you made that child so look after that baby.......
@laurenstiegel42068 ай бұрын
Your boys are lucky to have a mother like you ❤
@margodphd8 ай бұрын
Some people just aren't able to financially afford staying at home with their kids. Some are incapable, some unwilling. I'm not going to judge them because heroism isn't something society should force upon others. Some patients can get violent and dangerous to the point of being unable to stay at home, no matter how loved and cared for they are. This is the reality of some mental conditions. And help is needed even for the best, most devoted parents.
@missiadams33056 ай бұрын
you are precious ❣️
@Cedawood8 ай бұрын
That Dr that said he deliberately gave a very painful injection to the bully was also a professional bully
@jenbingham09148 ай бұрын
On one hand, I couldn't believe he would do such a thing. On the other hand, it is not surprising in the least.
@alisonmercer59468 ай бұрын
I just heard him say thatjfc
@jnebrm8 ай бұрын
And said he forced him onto the bed but quickly retracted that and said he talked him into it. Yeah right, u forced him as you said the first time. I cannot believe he willingly gave that information! A doctor doing that today would be struck off!
@TomMcHugh-l4v7 ай бұрын
Agreed, I couldn't believe what he was saying - then he tried to qualify his words too.
@eileenmoyer62397 ай бұрын
That woman who put her daughter in pennhurst acting like it was a great place just boggles my mind that place was horrendous and the children were treated terribly and her attitude is just unbelievable. Guess she tells herself she did the right thing so she can sleep at night.
@Shadow_Draws_206 ай бұрын
Exactly what I was thinking. She's majorly in denial.
@carishaw41434 ай бұрын
Staff more than likely put on a "show" for the parents, lied to parents, etc. Not that I'm for that mom, but back then they didn't have the knowledge we do now. I say this as a parent of an adult son with autism, who lives in a group home close by. I also work in supportive living for people with disabilities who are a bit more independent. Even though I know that my son is treated very well, I still have so much guilt, even though I know I couldn't keep caring for him 24/7 alone. I have learned that parents of the people I support have similar feelings. I treat all the people I support how I want my son to be treated. My son enjoys having guys at his home to hang out with and do trips with. Just last week, they went to the beach for the second time this summer. They are able to do more for him than I was able to do alone as a single mom.
@sadeememe4684Ай бұрын
She defends this god-forsaken place to cushion her guilt for leaving her child there. imo
@franceslynch88158 ай бұрын
Heartbreaking the way we were. How did we think a baby, child or person would feel nothing because it had a physical or mental disability. Human minds are callous and cruel. I learned from a very young age that my pets felt everthing I did, yet they had no language, had four legs and a tail. What happened people that they ceased empathising, the essence of humanity. It's as prevelant today as ever it was. The death penalty is one savage legacy from centuries past kept alive by similar minds that helped make Pennhurst.
@RachaelClarkeClarke8 ай бұрын
Weak people be horrible to other people/animals do it because it makes them feel better about themselves
@pamrussell51208 ай бұрын
Remember this was done with the best intent. However sometimes the wrong individuals work for their own needs. Sadly it hurt a lot of vulnerable people.
@lisalambrecht667622 күн бұрын
Lack of adequate funding is a major problem!
@missybishop49968 ай бұрын
35minutes in I don't know if I can stomach the fact these workers are still free making excuses! EFFING infuriating!😡 GOD bless these tortured,kind,smiling,AMAZING souls💓🙏
@greeneyedmimibostian30138 ай бұрын
Understaffing is a huge problem in nursing homes as well. Sad
@jessieinthewest8 ай бұрын
Yep. I work in one and have the most love and admiration for all my elderly residents and believe they deserve the highest level of care and attention. However we are so understaffed it’s irrelevant what I know each resident deserves, they literally do not allow you to give them the time they deserve. But the CEO is a multi millionaire.
@MamaTrauma8 ай бұрын
37:07 the irony of having a physician named Dr. Fear.
@jonawesolowski-thecommunit99687 ай бұрын
I thought the same thing too
@truthbtold31777 ай бұрын
Thank you for shining a spotlight
@brybryguy63143 ай бұрын
I grew up in this area, Royersford/Sping City. Pennhurst is something that is this shadow still over the community. I worked in town at the local pharmacies and some of these people in the interview I actually know personally. The former residents, and some of the nurses that worked there. I have heard the stories frist hand, the horrible things that took place. As a teen me and friends would urban explore Pennhurst, I see the unmarked graves, the tunnels and the abandoned buildings. The things I saw in thoughts buildings still hunt me today. You enter pennhurst especially the mayflower building, you are hit with dread and dispare that carries with you. Only way I can describe it. Now these days, some of the former residents still live in town such as miss Margaret who everyone in town knows. She is such an amazing person, so kind, will talk to anyone and she is a piller in the community if she knows it or not but she is. Everyone knows Margaret and she is loved by many in the community
@theregenedmoogles7415 ай бұрын
I'm a severely autistic nonspeaking person with multiple disabilties and suspected intellectual disabilty i know i have borderline intellectual disabiltty took me a while to learn how to type my words out and my mother may be a saint for never giving me away to an institution ever. She was abusvie to me but she still stopped me from being sent to places like these. I grew up mostly nonspeaking/nonverbal due to a dusorder called acquiared apraxia of speech that i got from severe brain injuries and from traumaticbrain truama. So i cannot imagine being sent here to suffer like them. It makes me sad that peopel do this to disabled people like me.
@elderscrollsbladesfan8 ай бұрын
I will comment that I believe some degree of these institutions are still necessary in our society. What seemed to be happening and is still happening at that time, was that there are some families that do not want to deal with their family members. What is to be done in these situations? We already have massive numbers of cases where there are parents who abuse or mistreat their nueral typical, as well as their delayed children. Someone should not be allowed to commit a child, just because they don't want to deal with them. Still, what is to be done. I will further comment that when they closed down or rescinded policies for many of these institutions, as well as cutting funding. They also cut funding for just facilities for individuals or communities for individuals with pure Mental Health Diagnosis. I'm referring to individuals that have non-functioning Schizophrenia, amongst other disorders. This is why we have so many people self medicating with drugs and living as the "homeless" on the streets. Some form of institutionalization may still be necessary.
@alisonmercer59468 ай бұрын
They are needed but the gov needs to make sure they are treated like humanely and have resources. That's it.
@jennifercottrill41448 ай бұрын
Just horrible, how can anybody abandon there children. I know it's not easy speaking of a mother of a child with disability. Breaks my heart
@OneStubbornLass2 ай бұрын
As an autistic woman, I can tell that some of these people are straight up lying and some of the parents are in denial… I know I would be there if I was born earlier. My heart goes out to the people who survived this torture.
@susanlaird51548 ай бұрын
I worked in a hospital for the mentally ill when I was 18. I must say I got great satisfaction working with the patients. I felt so sorry for most of them. I felt some of them should not have been there. For instance a girl gave birth out of wedlock and her family put her there. This was about the 1960’s. Well off family. Money certainly talks. This is in Scotland. Shame on them.
@lowespringacres78388 ай бұрын
So sad, but thank you for this documentary.
@William888895 ай бұрын
I don't understand how they have a haunted attraction in this location instead of a shrine dedicated to the people who were mistreated.
@purplemayhem4 ай бұрын
My mom works as a nurse with those with IDD (I think that's what it's called) in group homes. The reality is even now, in 2024, people are still struggling to care for those with disabilities. Slowly, people are learning more about disabilities and how to treat and care for people with them. Yes, progress is slow, but it's still progress. I look up to people like my mother who do their best to care for those with IDD, especially because I can see how stressful it is for them, yet they still do it to give these people the best care they can
@roxannerdrake36242 ай бұрын
DID, maybe. If you're referring to Dissociative Identity Disorder.
@tishgoss92596 ай бұрын
The parents who dumped their children there and the staff they interviewed and the physicians and staff are all culpable of the suffering of these innocent people. The mother sitting in the chair infuriates me the most.
@laurencaouette28968 ай бұрын
There is so something seriously wrong with that mom. And that nurse who said she was hired without any experience whatsoever and is now saying that they're hiring people without much experience in outside facilities and that's an issue. Like, this is post court documents, they know what was happening, and they're still this level of delusionally gross.
@ELD897 ай бұрын
While I'm glad that mental health is taken more seriously nowadays, it's truly sad that human beings were treated this way. Back in those days, asylums were pretty much just places to dump off these people because they didn't wanna deal with them. As someone who has aspberger syndrome along with anxiety disorder, my heart aches for the people who had to go through this harsh treatment. Despite my disabilities, I'm still fully able to take care of myself and am doing very well. I'm married to a wonderful woman who is the love of my life. I'm able to work normal jobs just like anyone else. Sure some people are real bad off mentally, but they're still human beings. I'm just thankful that most places like pennhurst are no longer in operation. Asylums were literally hellholes.
@valerienelson32968 ай бұрын
And I am so fearful we pur going full circle on this one as the funds dwindle & people forget. Never let them forget.❤
@rosie-ella764 ай бұрын
to the couple that were treated like worthless things, your story is the most romantic story ive heard. thank god you hsd each other ❤
@Sodonewithchaos7 ай бұрын
I worked in a Nursing home in 1986….with patients that were mentally disabled. It horrified me so much I still have nightmares…how they were treated and the smell of unwashed or cared for people….😢
@missybishop49968 ай бұрын
ANYONE who was weak and couldn't take care of responsibility and dumped these HUMANS there are despicable!
@sarahfowler93858 ай бұрын
In 1985 i had a very sweet baby boy who had diwn syndrome he had ti be fed through tube and was on oxygen i was told by two old ppl that i should be ashamed to bring that out in public 😞 was so angry told them look the other way if he ofends you so much as your actually offending me to having look at them and listen to their rubbish he was fully autistic to but a happy funny smiling boy just because that was the done thing back in the day does mean your ways were right thNk God for the knowledge and human rights now days if someone wants a baby you take what god blesses you with not throw them iin in a home because they aren't perfect very convenient to place them away and convince your self they looked after when all these kids wanted was their amily 😢
@Saer-s9u8 ай бұрын
🕊💞
@pizzatime375218 күн бұрын
Yep! It was really only legal to bring severely disabled children and adults into public in 1974, after a war veteran was fined over $20 (which was a lot back then, I believe) and, I think, killed for being disfigured due to burns from a landmine. Afterward, disabled people were allowed to be in public. Then, in the 90s, we were allowed to enter stores and buy products without being forcefully removed. They were probably not used to all these changes in disability rights and still saw them as sub-human. Honestly, many people still view us like that. It’s so sad.
@davidpaesch14337 ай бұрын
This history of indifference to our members of family and fellow humans just makes me so sad just breaks my heart and I want to cry 😢. So much indifference, Injustice to someone who just needs more help, love and understanding ❤.
@autistikitty23633 ай бұрын
the fact so many autistic people were abused and its STILL seen as some sort of illness to be eradicated and cured just breaks me. (as someone who is autistic and ADHD)
@kathrynwitte33989 ай бұрын
The first time a resident gave birth people needed to go to jail. The second time it should’ve been closed.
@reneelibby48858 ай бұрын
ok, but then what happens to the residents? can't close places without a plan.
@jenbingham09148 ай бұрын
@@reneelibby4885they figured out a plan to close it anyway didn't they? They could have closed it then. Babies being put in incinerators? They place should have been leveled.
@reneelibby48858 ай бұрын
oh not arguing that. just saying a lot of peo0ple were jus thrown out onto the streets when some places closed and that was a disgrace too@@jenbingham0914
@midget_princess22008 ай бұрын
My sons both have learning disabilities, asd and adhd, I'm so glad these places are closed!!! I'm a single mum to 3 and would probably have been told to send my babies to one of these places back in the day. Not a chance my babies belong with me!!!!
@karenavey21838 ай бұрын
It is unbelievable how far parents will go to protect themselves from the truth of their decisions.
@katelynmoore37748 ай бұрын
That mother in the beige jacket.. why is she pretending it was daisies and rainbows? "They had what they needed... all the activities.." Stop defending an institution that very clearly thrived in the abuse of humans.
@FleetwoodCaddy598 ай бұрын
Ohhhh I know!! She is in such “denial”she knows damn well how her daughter was treated
@BelindaMackey7 ай бұрын
Polly just lived in Denial she didn’t want the stymie of haveing a mentality challenge child … she made me cringe !! The state should have inspections on these institutions like they do now with nursing homes and Care homes. I don’t understand why the state didn’t step up and do all this and make sure that these children and these young adults were taken care of. I’ve been a nurse for 37 years and I have worked with lots of these children and I break my heart.
@elizabetherne5569 ай бұрын
It’s gotten worse since this was made as far as the private sector doesn’t have enough to take everybody. A small changing. So a blend of group homes and services and small state historians well monitored would actually be good. Most people that I know with disabilities can be in society. But we do need a space for those that cannot. I don’t see the private sector doing much better than the state hospitals. My uncle got taken advantage of by an employee in his group home. She influenced him badly and it created problems at home. And yes, she took money from him. And threatened him. So I really don’t want to hear that group homes are the answer. They do not do any sort of background check at hire beyond the state you are in. I also know somebody hired to provide services to the handicapped that in another state went to prison for drugs, assault, and theft. If the state actually cared and regulated properly including group homes, we would have a really good system.
@maurachapman41798 ай бұрын
Minnesota has many regulations and monitoring. Mandatory background checks excludes felons and many more. And yet, "bad apples " occur. Minnesota has stringent annual training requirements for staff. Our blue state, Hubert Humphreys state, still struggles with the legislators to get funding for the community programs each year.
@jenbingham09148 ай бұрын
That is not always true. I don't work for a group home (I work in a small locally owned pet store) but my boss owns a group home. She does very stringent background checks on each employee she has. I cannot speak for other group homes, but the residents in her home get better care than most of us out here taking care of ourselves.
@silversmoke68 ай бұрын
@jenbingham0914 problem is, there is very little state oversight and the standards of such homes vary and are not consistent across the board. While your boss may be excellent, many places arent. I am disabled. I am autistic and have ADHD, and various other diagnosis as a result of the first two. I am a lawyer and can solve complex legal problems and i can convince people to do what i want. However, i will never be able to manage a home. I struggle with daily tasks. I forget i need to eat and wash. I have sensory issues that cause weeks long shut downs. It has taken me a long time to accept that i will need assistance for the rest of my life. But the resources just dont exist
@alisonmercer59468 ай бұрын
LooK at all of the stuff that came out about homes in Canada , in Ontario in particular. And they were making record profits.they are private businesses. People are,left to rot and the workers have a few minutes per patient. So wtf has changed.
@alisonmercer59468 ай бұрын
Yes the government needs to properly regulate it. There is no reason to not have places where people can actually get the care and socialization they need.
@eviesholette5 ай бұрын
it is 2024 and this remains such an important topic to discuss in our world. the disabled are still treated like second-class citizens. I have been fighting for government aid due to my physical disabilities and the effect they have had on my mental faculties for 5 years or more now. and being so close to a decision is bittersweet because I have to acknowledge that I would also be signing away some of my rights as a citizen to accept this aid. I would not be able to marry without fearing the loss of benefits, nor could I save money or expect to rise out of poverty. and this is all due to health conditions out of my control, or any person's. I was born with genetic conditions and that can't be helped. but I, and all the other people like me or in need of greater assistance to live in this world, deserve to be treated with the dignity befitting any human being. we deserve the same opportunities for life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. there will be no equality without disabled equality. *note: severe hand pain = poor typing. forgive my refusal to make the effort to properly capitalize things bc reaching for it hurts more than i'd like to deal with. thank goodness for Grammarly and their autocorrect function or this would be illegible haha
@ruthie19674 ай бұрын
I had a son with down syndrome in 1984 at the ripe old age of 16. Doctor encouraged me to find a home for him. Nope, I raised him myself. We're two peas in a pod. I listened, read talked to other parents and we made it out on top.
@The-Portland-Daily-Blink7 ай бұрын
This is so sad... so many sad stories. All those wasted lives, people who should never have been there in the first place.
@jvw4188 ай бұрын
Shame on the workers who abused the patients and shame on the ones that didn’t yet, allowed it happen. Shame On the parents for dropping thier children off instead of caring for them. Shame on the state of PA for understaffing. A horrible tragedy for the patients. There still is not enough services. It’s a disgrace. Shame on these women who are in such denial about the abuses that were ongoing. That lady is rediculous.
@ddz13758 ай бұрын
I knew a woman who had a brother in Pennhurst, he had downs syndrome. They were a Catholic family with eight kids under the age of 12. He was placed there and they never saw or visited him again. Kid died of pneumonia and another fever. He made it to 16. The family was never the same after. My friend became wild in her teens, diagnosed as bipolar, alcoholic and a pill head. She died of an overdose at age 46. The whole family excepting two sisters were a mess.
@margodphd8 ай бұрын
Very catholic of them to just dump him like a broken appliance..