Michigan kids in mental health crisis sent out of state as facilities
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[April 07, 2026]
By ELI NEWMAN and JORDYN HERMANI/Bridge Michigan
Eleanor Middlin was 15 when her family sent her to a Missouri boarding
school, an 11-hour drive from her mid-Michigan home. It was the worst
thing that ever happened to her. It also saved her life.
“I’m alive because of it, and I will never be able to forget it,”
Middlin, now 20, told Bridge Michigan.
Her experience leaving Michigan for long-term care represents an
emerging trend for the state’s youth in severe mental health crises.
In the years following the COVID-19 pandemic, a growing number of teens
and children are being sent hundreds or thousands of miles from home,
often because the state lacks the resources to treat them here.
The Middlins are among an unknown number of families in Michigan who pay
their own way to get the help they need — their experience largely
invisible in state data.
But for other children placed in facilities through court order or child
welfare, state reports show out-of-state placements have surged in
recent years as a series of Michigan facilities closed.
As of September, 152 youth in Michigan’s direct-placement program were
living in out-of-state facilities — some as far away as Hawaii and
Arizona, according to a recent report from the Department of Health and
Human Services.
That was up from 122 children sent out of state in 2024 and more than
double the 74 children in 2023.

Forcing a child to travel for care is like “throwing them to the
wolves,” said Laura Marshall of Cedar Springs, whose son was sent to a
Wyoming long-term treatment facility through court order. “We had no
control over where he was going.”
Families say the extreme distance makes it challenging to plan visits
and some facilities further limit contact. The isolation can be
detrimental to their children’s recovery and traumatizing for parents to
endure.
“Horror stories” about abuse and staff misconduct dominate conversations
about youth treatment facilities, adding a layer of fear for parents
that their loved ones may return in a worse condition.
“You’re shipping your kid, in some cases, across the country,” Marshall
said. “There really isn’t any way as a parent to be able to vet what’s
really going on.”
State officials believe the rise in out-of-state placements is largely
limited to court-supervised youth in the juvenile justice system, not
children they directly oversee. But counties that report placement data
to the state are “not required” to share that information, a
spokesperson said.
“The Michigan Department of Health and Human Services believes that
placement decisions for youth in foster care and those involved with the
juvenile justice system must be guided by safety, stability and the best
interests of each individual child to ensure they receive the care and
treatment they need to thrive,” spokesperson Erin Stover wrote in an
email.
The confusion is a symptom of a larger problem, lawmakers contend: A
massive department overseeing a sprawling landscape of juvenile
facilities that could lead to kids falling through the cracks — or
needing to seek care elsewhere because state offerings are not
accessible at the time.
“The liability question is really huge, because who is responsible?”
State Rep. John Roth, R-Interlochen, said. “If that kid gets seriously
injured in an (out-of-state facility), is it the state that they went
to’s problem now?”

‘Fighting it out’ for treatment
Eleanor Middlin was hospitalized for self-harm at 12 years old.
Throughout her adolescence, Eleanor had seen therapists and received
medication. But her mental health issues compounded during the pandemic,
a period marked by intense isolation and “complete access” to the
internet. Snapchat, Instagram and Yubo became social media vehicles
toward a “path of feeling horrible” about herself.
“It was the perfect environment for me to get worse,” she said.
She developed substance-use disorders — mainly “downers” like Xanax and
opioids — and eating disorders. Many of her habits were unknown to her
mother, Jennifer Middlin.
“It felt shameful … even though we tried everything that we could try,”
Jennifer told Bridge. “It’s sort of this secret club that no one wants
to be part of and no one admits to being part of.”
Short-term stays could stabilize her daughter, Jennifer said, but
Eleanor needed something more than the behavioral health centers near
Holt were offering.
“We didn’t think we could keep her monitored the way she needed to be
monitored,” she said. “They didn’t have recommendations that we could
really sink our teeth into, so we had to find it on our own.”
The cost of out-of-state care came out-of-pocket for the Middlins —
Jennifer estimates her family spent $90,000 on her daughter’s treatment.
Insurance didn’t cover her daughter’s frequent therapy sessions at the
boarding school. The loans and the toll on her savings to make payments
were “financially devastating.”
The state also carries a significant financial cost to send its youth
out-of-state for treatment — it paid more than $13 million in related
costs last fiscal year, with about half coming from the state. That was
up from $9.7 million the prior year.
That amounted to $392 per day of care, up from $379.
Parents and mental health advocates describe a system that consistently
fails children with complex psychological disorders, where the needed
treatment “doesn’t exist anywhere” in Michigan.
They point to several intersecting factors — limited in-state capacity,
insurance not offering enough support and publicly-funded community
mental health services not meeting the needs of families.

Emergency calls to deal with youth in crises are frequent, setting the
stage for many youth to have prolonged encounters with the criminal
justice system to address their needs.
Insurance companies and the public mental health system are constantly
“fighting it out” to cover care, said Rachel Cuschieri-Murray, a
cofounder of a local parents group called Advocates for Mental Health of
MI Youth. “So it’s not being done by anyone.”
Parents are being overwhelmed, she said, both by the specific needs of
their children, and by navigating a system that does not provide a
roadmap for care.
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Vista Maria residential treatment program is seen, Wednesday, Feb.
18, 2026, in Dearborn Heights, Mich. (Eli Newman/Bridge Michigan via
AP)
 A ‘perfect storm’
There were 9,200 children in Michigan’s welfare system as of
December 2024, according to recent state reporting. Of those, 468
lived in institutional centers that include youth residential
treatment facilities.
Several of those facilities, which house children and teens with
significant emotional, behavioral or mental health challenges, have
closed since the onset of the pandemic, when about 1,200 beds for
child caring institutions were operating. Today, there are fewer
than 400 beds available.
Dan Gowdy, the president of the Association of Accredited Child and
Family Agencies and the CEO of the Grand Rapids-based Wedgewood
Christian Services, describes a “perfect storm” that enabled the
current capacity crisis in Michigan.
Youth mental health had been deteriorating long before COVID-19 with
the proliferation of social media, he explained. The pandemic made
matters worse with “extended isolation” pushing the problems out of
public view.
Mounting staff turnover at child caring institutions became the norm
in the early-2020s, as facilities went on “full lockdown for months
at a time,” Gowdy added. Amid the “great retirement” during COVID,
programs could not safely staff their facilities amid “skyrocketing”
assaults.
Kathy Regan, CEO of recently-closed Vista Maria residential
treatment program in Dearborn Heights, said the agency’s insurance
provider for workers’ compensation stopped coverage at the end of
2025 due to the severity of staff injuries, which included broken
knees and dislocated shoulders.
“I can’t keep staff safe,” Regan said in an October 2025 interview.
“They’re getting their asses handed to them.”
With fewer beds and trained staff available, providers say recent
state regulations also pushed agencies to deny children with severe
behavioral health issues.

After the death of 16-year-old Cornelius Fredrick, whose fatal
restraint at Lakeside Academy in Kalamazoo was determined to be
homicide, MDHHS adopted new rules in 2022 to reduce the use of
“restraints and seclusions” at state child caring facilities.
Two former staffers charged with involuntary manslaughter in
Fredrick’s death were sentenced to probation and Lakeside Academy
was closed.
Stover, the MDHHS spokesperson, said that use of restraints “is
permitted in emergency situations to ensure the safety of youth and
staff,” adding that emergency restraints were utilized 362 times in
February alone.
Shifting state policies and oversight have put pressure on youth
residential treatment facilities to address growing wait lists,
Gowdy said, even if that means taking on children and teens whose
needs are not aligned with what facilities can offer.
“You had smaller available beds, high-acuity youth concentrated in
more intense environments,” Gowdy told Bridge. “That’s just simply
not sustainable.”
According to the state, there are 101 active child caring
institutions in Michigan. Gowdy estimates about 16 youth treatment
programs have shuttered since the onset of the pandemic.
The Shawono Center in Grayling, Michigan’s only state-run
residential facility for male juveniles, closed in February 2025.
Vista Maria, which had been the state’s largest treatment facility
for girls, shut down in December.
Ahead of Vista Maria’s closure, Regan described “a systemic crash”
happening for Michigan’s youth treatment programs, but said she
didn’t have the answers as to why.
Michigan has worked in recent months to increase its in-state
capacity to serve youth in psychiatric crisis. Still, many children
and teens are traveling to states as far as Nebraska and Utah to get
help.
The path forward
Some lawmakers say that no real, substantive changes are likely to
occur within the state’s youth treatment facilities this year amid
elections to replace term-limited Gov. Gretchen Whitmer and other
officials.
With the Whitmer administration having “just months” left in office,
“I just don’t see it as something that they’re going to be willing
to tackle,” state Rep. Matt Bierlein, R-Vassar, said.

Instead, he argued, a voter-approved change to legislative term
limits — allowing lawmakers to serve up to 12 years in a single
chamber — has led to a strong bench of Republicans and Democrats who
care about the topic and have the institutional knowledge to
possibly enact change.
Providers and advocates hope the state can develop more sustainable
practices for its facilities in the future, and bring about more
specialized bed capacity for those who need it. That includes taking
a trauma-informed approach to deliver services and implementing
proper public investment to train clinicians and frontline staff to
care for children and teens.
Families say finding community in those who have already charted the
turbulent tides of the state’s mental health care system has been a
critical resource.
“The more connected you are, the more success you’re going to have
in navigating the system,” said parent advocate Cuschieri-Murray.
For Eleanor Middlin, the crisis stabilization services she got in
Michigan were a “life preserver” to keep her head above water when
she really needed a “lifeboat” of long-term care to take her safely
to shore, which her family eventually found in Missouri.
Now adjusting to life back in Holt, she hopes telling her story will
remove some of the stigma that surrounds mental health issues.
“I’m not looking for everyone to understand what I went through and
how that affected me,” she said. “I’m more just hoping that maybe
the one person who needs it … maybe they understand it. Maybe they
feel a little bit less alone about that.”
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