Popular on s4story
- AdvisorVault Releases New Explainer Video on their 17a-4 Managed 365 Service - 128
- RNHA FL Unveils Bold New Leadership Ahead of 2026 Elections - 123
- Mullins McLeod Surges Into SC Governor's Race with $1.4 Million Raised in First Quarter; Most from His Own Commitment, Not Political Pockets - 121
- Dr. Frederic Scheer to Speak at Big Sky AI Forum in Bozeman, Montana
- Root Canal Specialist In Frederick Maryland Joins Pearlfection Dentistry
- Award-Winning YA Novel Allie's Adventure on the Wonder to Shine on a Times Square Billboard
- Hiclean Tools Releases HCX2100 Electric Pressure Washer
- Some Music for Donald's Bad Day
- Jaipur's Savista Retreat announces $299 all-inclusive nightly rate for two for the 2026 season, including meals and city-center transfers
- Unique Retelling of the Christmas Story
Similar on s4story
- Peter Coe Verbica Stands with Rural Families and Horse Owners: "Keep Horses Classified as Livestock"
- Cerberus ODC in Collaboration with NVIDIA Launches All-American AI-RAN Stack, Enabling AI-Native 5G Today and Accelerating the Path to 6G
- Pastor Darrell Armstrong Suspends Gubernatorial Campaign And Endorses Mikie Sherrill
- Dr. Johnny Shanks Attends Full Arch Growth Conference 2025
- Qvarz LLC Expands Global Reach with High-Precision Quartz Cuvettes and Optical Components
- Assent Recognizes Manufacturers for Leading Supply Chain Sustainability Programs
- New Research Reveals Mild Cold—Not Extreme Cold—Delivers Real Health Benefits of Cold Therapy
- PatientNow Acquires Recura, the AI Growth Engine Powering Practice Growth
- Boston Industrial Solutions Unveils New and Improved Natron® UV Screen Printing Ink
- Genuine Smiles Unveils New User-Friendly Website
Mental Health Watchdog Seeks Action Amid Alarming Patient Sexual Abuse Cases
S For Story/10653505
CCHR Demands Increased Oversight and Accountability in Response to National Scandal of Staff-Inflicted Sexual Abuse in Residential Behavioral Hospitals
LOS ANGELES - s4story -- The Citizens Commission on Human Rights (CCHR) International, a leading watchdog for the mental health industry abuse for over 56 years, is urgently calling for stronger regulatory protections and accountability to address the epidemic of sexual abuse allegations in psychiatric and behavioral facilities. This comes in the wake of CCHR's report from February 2025, which revealed disturbing increases in reports of sexual abuse of patients by staff in for-profit residential psychiatric hospitals.
Research and reports from the UK indicate that a shocking 95% of such cases may never be reported to authorities, which CCHR believes could reflect a similar situation in the U.S., leaving survivors without justice and perpetrators unpunished.[1] Furthermore, many of the victims in these facilities are vulnerable juveniles, with the Lawsuit Information Center warning that the problem is particularly severe in programs that "operate with minimal regulation or oversight from state authorities, creating an environment where abuse can go undetected for long periods."[2]
"Abuse thrives in environments with minimal oversight," said Jan Eastgate, President of CCHR International. "Many mental health facilities operate with little supervision, creating a breeding ground for these horrific acts to go undetected for years. Treating psychiatrists, hospital staff and profit-driven corporate managers have been complicit in failing to act to protect."
In some cases, survivors and their families have struggled to bring incidents to light due to restrictive reporting mechanisms and institutional resistance to transparency.
Recent studies confirm these claims, with a 2023 report revealing that 5 to 45% of inpatient mental health patients have experienced sexual violence during their admission.[3] Another study by the Joint Commission found that assault and sexual assault incidents in hospitals generally had risen 77% over two years, with nearly 43% of cases involving sexual assaults – 28% of which were perpetrated by staff members.[4]
More on S For Story
In response to this systemic abuse, CCHR is calling for immediate regulatory changes, including the revocation of government contracts for any facility found to have committed sexual abuse and criminal accountability for those responsible and a review of their Medicaid and Medicare reimbursements. The group emphasizes that for-profit psychiatric and behavioral hospitals should be held accountable as a condition of receiving government or private insurance reimbursements.
CCHR's calls for reform after several high-profile cases. In Detroit, Fox 2 News reported on a facility that for decades has had allegations of sexual abuse against children. The psychiatric hospital was suspended for five years in 2022, accused of covering up "horrific" sexual abuse.[5] Over 70% of the owning company's revenue in 2024 derived from Medicaid (56.5%) and Medicare (14.2%) representing $2.2 billion of its total $3.15 billion.
The problem is not confined to the United States. A 2024 investigation by The Independent and Sky News uncovered tens of thousands of sexual assaults and incidents at state-run mental health hospitals in the UK. The investigation revealed that fewer than 5% of sexual incidents reported to hospitals were referred to the police, while over 19,000 incidents occurred between 2019 and 2023, including hundreds of reports of serious assaults on women.[6]
A 2024 U.S. Senate investigation into residential mental health treatment centers further revealed severe abuse cases, including sexual violence, physical harm, and neglect, particularly against minors with developmental disabilities or those in foster care systems. These facilities often rely on public funding, raising significant concerns about the safety of children under the care of these institutions.[7]
Lawsuit Information Center reports, "Most concerningly, many of these minors—who often have developmental disabilities or are part of the foster care system—are placed in these facilities with public funding, including Medicaid and child welfare dollars. This raises serious questions about the use of taxpayer money to support facilities that fail to ensure the safety and well-being of children under their care."
More on S For Story
"For-profit psychiatric and behavioral hospitals must be held accountable for prioritizing financial gain over patient well-being," Jan Eastgate, president of CCHR International said. "We need real consequences for those who allow these abuses to continue."
CCHR, which was established in 1969 by the Church of Scientology and the professor of psychiatry, Dr. Thomas Szasz, is calling for an overhaul of the system, including substantial fines for negligent facilities, penalties for those responsible for abuse, and the creation of more accessible mechanisms for patients and families to report abuse without fear of retribution. Patients and their families are urged to use CCHR's Abuse Case form to report any incidents of abuse.
Sources:
[1] Rebecca Thomas and Sky News's Rob Mulhern, "Mental health patients 'r*ped and sexually assaulted' as NHS abuse scandal revealed," The Independent, 29 Jan. 2024, www.independent.co.uk/news/health/sexual-abuse-mental-health-uk-b2484163.html
[2] Ronald V. Miller, Jr., "Residential Treatment Facility Sex Abuse Lawsuits," Lawsuit Information Center, 14 Nov. 2024, www.lawsuit-information-center.com/residential-treatment-facility-sex-abuse-lawsuits.html
[3] Holly Betterly, Meghan Musselman, and Renée Sorrentino, "Sexual assault in the inpatient psychiatric setting," General Hospital Psychiatry, Vol. 82, May–June 2023, Pages 7-13, www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0163834323000270
[4] Gretchen Morgenson, "Lean staffing, lax hiring, training flaws: Why sexual assaults at hospitals are up
Allegations that go unreported and a lack of accountability for healthcare workers leave patients in the dark and increase the risk of abuse, research shows," NBC News, 18 Nov. 2024, www.nbcnews.com/health/health-care/lean-staffing-lax-hiring-training-flaws-assaults-hospitals-are-rcna171055
[5] "Closed Detroit youth mental health facility accused of covering up 'horrific' sexual abuse in new lawsuit," Fox 2 Detroit, 11 Mar. 2025, www.fox2detroit.com/news/closed-detroit-youth-mental-health-facility-accused-covering-up-horrific-sexual-abuse-new-lawsuit
[6] Rebecca Thomas and Sky News's Rob Mulhern, "Mental health patients 'r*ped and sexually assaulted' as NHS abuse scandal revealed," The Independent, 29 Jan. 2024, www.independent.co.uk/news/health/sexual-abuse-mental-health-uk-b2484163.html
[7] Ronald V. Miller, Jr., "Residential Treatment Facility Sex Abuse Lawsuits," Lawsuit Information Center, 14 Nov. 2024, www.lawsuit-information-center.com/residential-treatment-facility-sex-abuse-lawsuits.html
Research and reports from the UK indicate that a shocking 95% of such cases may never be reported to authorities, which CCHR believes could reflect a similar situation in the U.S., leaving survivors without justice and perpetrators unpunished.[1] Furthermore, many of the victims in these facilities are vulnerable juveniles, with the Lawsuit Information Center warning that the problem is particularly severe in programs that "operate with minimal regulation or oversight from state authorities, creating an environment where abuse can go undetected for long periods."[2]
"Abuse thrives in environments with minimal oversight," said Jan Eastgate, President of CCHR International. "Many mental health facilities operate with little supervision, creating a breeding ground for these horrific acts to go undetected for years. Treating psychiatrists, hospital staff and profit-driven corporate managers have been complicit in failing to act to protect."
In some cases, survivors and their families have struggled to bring incidents to light due to restrictive reporting mechanisms and institutional resistance to transparency.
Recent studies confirm these claims, with a 2023 report revealing that 5 to 45% of inpatient mental health patients have experienced sexual violence during their admission.[3] Another study by the Joint Commission found that assault and sexual assault incidents in hospitals generally had risen 77% over two years, with nearly 43% of cases involving sexual assaults – 28% of which were perpetrated by staff members.[4]
More on S For Story
- Erika Christensen Draws Crowd at Ultimate Women's Expo LA with Message of Mental Resilience
- 75th Anniversary of Dianetics Sparks Interest in Understanding the Human Mind
- Are you afraid of your own mind?
- Jason Dohring Captivates Audience with Candid Talk on Self-Discovery and Confidence
- Cerberus ODC in Collaboration with NVIDIA Launches All-American AI-RAN Stack, Enabling AI-Native 5G Today and Accelerating the Path to 6G
In response to this systemic abuse, CCHR is calling for immediate regulatory changes, including the revocation of government contracts for any facility found to have committed sexual abuse and criminal accountability for those responsible and a review of their Medicaid and Medicare reimbursements. The group emphasizes that for-profit psychiatric and behavioral hospitals should be held accountable as a condition of receiving government or private insurance reimbursements.
CCHR's calls for reform after several high-profile cases. In Detroit, Fox 2 News reported on a facility that for decades has had allegations of sexual abuse against children. The psychiatric hospital was suspended for five years in 2022, accused of covering up "horrific" sexual abuse.[5] Over 70% of the owning company's revenue in 2024 derived from Medicaid (56.5%) and Medicare (14.2%) representing $2.2 billion of its total $3.15 billion.
The problem is not confined to the United States. A 2024 investigation by The Independent and Sky News uncovered tens of thousands of sexual assaults and incidents at state-run mental health hospitals in the UK. The investigation revealed that fewer than 5% of sexual incidents reported to hospitals were referred to the police, while over 19,000 incidents occurred between 2019 and 2023, including hundreds of reports of serious assaults on women.[6]
A 2024 U.S. Senate investigation into residential mental health treatment centers further revealed severe abuse cases, including sexual violence, physical harm, and neglect, particularly against minors with developmental disabilities or those in foster care systems. These facilities often rely on public funding, raising significant concerns about the safety of children under the care of these institutions.[7]
Lawsuit Information Center reports, "Most concerningly, many of these minors—who often have developmental disabilities or are part of the foster care system—are placed in these facilities with public funding, including Medicaid and child welfare dollars. This raises serious questions about the use of taxpayer money to support facilities that fail to ensure the safety and well-being of children under their care."
More on S For Story
- National Compliance Firm issues Artificial Intelligence Policy Program for Mortgage Banking
- New Book By Rebecca Jane Empowers Women to Break Free from Relationship Uncertainty
- Pastor Darrell Armstrong Suspends Gubernatorial Campaign And Endorses Mikie Sherrill
- Dr. Johnny Shanks Attends Full Arch Growth Conference 2025
- Offline Asset Protection: NJTRX Implements 98 Percent Cold Storage as Industry Faces 2 Billion USD Losses
"For-profit psychiatric and behavioral hospitals must be held accountable for prioritizing financial gain over patient well-being," Jan Eastgate, president of CCHR International said. "We need real consequences for those who allow these abuses to continue."
CCHR, which was established in 1969 by the Church of Scientology and the professor of psychiatry, Dr. Thomas Szasz, is calling for an overhaul of the system, including substantial fines for negligent facilities, penalties for those responsible for abuse, and the creation of more accessible mechanisms for patients and families to report abuse without fear of retribution. Patients and their families are urged to use CCHR's Abuse Case form to report any incidents of abuse.
Sources:
[1] Rebecca Thomas and Sky News's Rob Mulhern, "Mental health patients 'r*ped and sexually assaulted' as NHS abuse scandal revealed," The Independent, 29 Jan. 2024, www.independent.co.uk/news/health/sexual-abuse-mental-health-uk-b2484163.html
[2] Ronald V. Miller, Jr., "Residential Treatment Facility Sex Abuse Lawsuits," Lawsuit Information Center, 14 Nov. 2024, www.lawsuit-information-center.com/residential-treatment-facility-sex-abuse-lawsuits.html
[3] Holly Betterly, Meghan Musselman, and Renée Sorrentino, "Sexual assault in the inpatient psychiatric setting," General Hospital Psychiatry, Vol. 82, May–June 2023, Pages 7-13, www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0163834323000270
[4] Gretchen Morgenson, "Lean staffing, lax hiring, training flaws: Why sexual assaults at hospitals are up
Allegations that go unreported and a lack of accountability for healthcare workers leave patients in the dark and increase the risk of abuse, research shows," NBC News, 18 Nov. 2024, www.nbcnews.com/health/health-care/lean-staffing-lax-hiring-training-flaws-assaults-hospitals-are-rcna171055
[5] "Closed Detroit youth mental health facility accused of covering up 'horrific' sexual abuse in new lawsuit," Fox 2 Detroit, 11 Mar. 2025, www.fox2detroit.com/news/closed-detroit-youth-mental-health-facility-accused-covering-up-horrific-sexual-abuse-new-lawsuit
[6] Rebecca Thomas and Sky News's Rob Mulhern, "Mental health patients 'r*ped and sexually assaulted' as NHS abuse scandal revealed," The Independent, 29 Jan. 2024, www.independent.co.uk/news/health/sexual-abuse-mental-health-uk-b2484163.html
[7] Ronald V. Miller, Jr., "Residential Treatment Facility Sex Abuse Lawsuits," Lawsuit Information Center, 14 Nov. 2024, www.lawsuit-information-center.com/residential-treatment-facility-sex-abuse-lawsuits.html
Source: Citizens Commission on Human Rights International
0 Comments
Latest on S For Story
	- Working Too Much and Not Getting the Results You Want?
- Boston Industrial Solutions Unveils New and Improved Natron® UV Screen Printing Ink
- Genuine Smiles Unveils New User-Friendly Website
- Nusign Global Launch Event Concludes Successfully, Embarking on a New International Chapter
- Lift Solutions Holdings Announces Exclusive Distributorship for Advanced Camera and Sensor Products from Automate Matrix
- Political Division and Safety Concerns Drive Record Number of Americans to Seek "Golden Visas," La Vida Survey Finds
- MIKE.A Trading joins FasterCapital's Equitypilot to scale Sardinia travel, investments and books
- The Citizens Commission on Human Rights of Florida Celebrates Volunteers and Community Partners at the 9th Annual Humanitarian Awards Banquet
- J French's #1 Album "I Don't Believe in Bad Days" Enters the Grammy Conversation
- "This is Childish" - New Creative Journal Helps Adults Reconnect with Inner Child
- Words of Veterans & Veterans Growing America Collaboration
- Mature Athlete - Want Elite, Web-Based Nutrition and Training Coaching?
- Engaged at Any Age: 73-Year-Old Client Finds True Love Through Elite Asian Matchmaker
- Launch of Professional Private Autopsy Services to Support Families, Professionals, and Researchers
- He Started a New Career at 77; Maybe Not His Last
- "The Art of Philanthropy" — A Year-Long Campaign Supporting the USO and Military Veterans
- TRUE Palliative Care Launches as California Strengthens Commitment to Compassionate Care Under SB 403
- Anna August Releases New Small Town Romantic Suspense Novel – Lingering Flames
- Mysterious Interstellar Object 3I/ATLAS Appears to Pause Near Mars, Exhibiting Periodic Light Pulses
- $73.6 Million in Order Backlog Poised for Explosive Growth in 2026; Streamlined Share Structure: Cycurion, Inc. (N A S D A Q: CYCU) $CYCU
