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MVTC Establishes The Daniel P. Villiers Fund for Financial Aid

Established in November 2016 to honor Mountain Valley’s visionary and a member of the founding team, The Daniel P. Villiers Fund for Financial Aid will be used to assist parents who qualify for need-based financial assistance afford the Mountain Valley experience for their children.

Dr. Villiers’ lasting legacy at Mountain Valley is the hundreds of adolescents who have successfully completed their treatment goals and have graduated either devoid of anxiety or, at the very least, well-prepared to face the challenges that they will experience with their anxiety and related disorders going forward. It was Dan who developed the unique service of conducting in-home interviews and supported admissions for school and social avoidant teenagers – a component of Mountain Valley that has helped set us apart from other specialized anxiety treatment centers.   Unfortunately, many of the families with whom Dan met during his years at Mountain Valley were not able to take advantage of our services due to cost restrictions.  And while Mountain Valley is able to offer a few qualifying families some financial assistance, this support currently comes directly from MVTC’s operating budget, a paradigm that could pose a negative long-term problem for a relatively new program with limited resources. The time has come to create Mountain Valley’s first endowed fund, and it is fitting that such a fund celebrate Dr. Villiers’ legacy.

The Daniel P. Villiers Fund for Financial Aid has been established, therefore, for three compelling reasons – to honor Dan in perpetuity for his contributions to Mountain Valley, to ensure that even more families are able to take advantage of treatment, and to help ensure financial sustainability for Mountain Valley.

Interested in making a gift in support of The Villiers Fund?  Contact Carl Lovejoy, Associate Executive Director for Communications and Development at clovejoy@mountainvalleytreatment.org.

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MVTC’s Dr. Young and Dr. DiGiacomo create Exposure Specialist Training Program

Residential staff are the lifeblood of any successful program. Mountain Valley is no different. Lovingly referred to as “Res Staff,” they are here 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. They see the best and worst moments of a resident’s journey at Mountain Valley. They have a tricky and often thankless job, requiring flexibility to morph from coach to cook, organizer, chauffeur, life guard, art teacher, yogi, etc., all while remaining an empathic, confidant and unwavering supporter.

At Mountain Valley, we have added yet another responsibility to the litany of tasks required as a Res Staff–proficiency in the language of anxiety and exposure. All Res Staff receive training on the most frequent diagnoses we see at Mountain Valley (Anxiety, OCD, etc.) as well as our preferred treatment approach, exposure based Cognitive Behavioral Therapy. This training allows everyone to speak the same therapeutic “language.” However, unlike many other treatment programs, our training doesn’t necessarily end there.

For the Res Staff who demonstrate superior leadership skills and initiative, Mountain Valley goes beyond the basics and provides additional training led by Dr. Tim DiGiacomo and Dr. Alex Young. In other words, rather than just having those Res Staff complete Anxiety 101, Dr. Young and Dr. DiGiacomo provide them with an anxiety immersion program to take them from proficient to fluent. Training involves both didactic and practical components and, once training is completed, Specialists participate in on-going group supervision with members of the Clinical Staff. Res Staff who have successfully completed this additional training become certified as Mountain Valley Exposure Specialists.

Exposure Specialists are charged with integrating exposure activities into daily life at Mountain Valley. From doing animal chores with someone who fears contamination to taking a trip to the Boston Aquarium with a resident who is working on a fear of crowds, the possibilities are seemingly endless. Last week, we started our third round of Exposure Specialist trainings and hope to be welcoming several new members to our Exposure Specialist team in the coming months. If you are interested in meeting our current Exposure Specialists, click here

 

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Carl Lovejoy Recipient of NATSAP Excellence in Service Award

Mountain Valley’s Associate Executive Director for Communications and Development, Carl Lovejoy, was honored to receive an Excellence in Service Award by the National Association of Therapeutic Schools and Programs (NATSAP) at the  Northeast Regional Conference dinner on September 28 in Kennebunkport, ME.  Carl is a member of Mountain Valley’s founding team and has held various positions of leadership at MVTC since April 2011.

Carl J. LovejoyNATSAP, of which Mountain Valley is a member, was created in January of 1999 to serve as a national resource for programs and professionals assisting young people beleaguered by emotional and behavioral difficulties. The Association is governed by an elected, volunteer Board of Directors comprised of representatives from the NATSAP membership.  Membership in NATSAP is voluntary and is renewed annually. Members include therapeutic schools, residential treatment programs, wilderness therapy programs, outdoor therapeutic programs, young adult programs and home-based residential programs. NATSAP requires the members of our organization to be licensed by the appropriate state agency authorized to set and oversee standards of therapeutic and/or behavioral healthcare for youth and adolescents or accredited by a nationally recognized behavioral health accreditation agency and to have therapeutic services with oversight by a qualified clinician.

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Mountain Valley Receives Second Grant from Lighthouse Charitable Foundation

Mountain Valley recently became the recipient of a generous grant from the Lighthouse Charitable Foundation (LCF) – the second such grant we have received from this wonderful organization. Founded in 2015, LCF provides financial support to families with a child already enrolled in a therapeutic program and in need of funding to complete treatment. LCF recognizes that there are many teenagers whose parents have exhausted their personal financial resources trying to give their children the therapy they need and that the cost of continued therapy, whether inpatient or outpatient, is impossible to bear. LCF seeks to bridge that gap.

We thank Lighthouse Charitable Foundation – and, especially, LCF’s Founding Directors, Juli Frawley and Lara Balter, for the incredible demonstration of support to MVTC and our families.

To learn more about LCF, visit their website at http://lighthousecharitablefoundation.org/

 

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MVTC Therapists Travel to Houston for Behavioral Therapy Training

Two of our very talented therapists, Jeanette Nogales and Bryan Randolph, recently traveled to Houston to attend The Behavior Therapy Training Institute (BTTI), sponsored by the International OCD Foundation. BTTI is an in-depth three-day intensive training course in Cognitive Behavior Therapy (CBT) for mental health professionals who are treating individuals with Obsessive Compulsive Disorder and related disorders. The BTTI was developed to help address the shortage of therapists properly trained in using CBT to treat OCD around the country and the world. The objective was to find a training model and format that was more intensive comprehensive and clinically useful than most workshops but that was also shorter and more accessible than the few fellowships and internships offering training in the treatment of OCD.

Mountain Valley frequently sends staff members, both clinical and residential, to professional development opportunities such as BTTI, ensuring that all members of the MVTC community are well-versed, if not experts, in the treatment of anxiety.

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MVTC to be Well-Represented at ADAA Conference

Mountain Valley will be well represented at this week’s Anxiety and Depression Association of America’s annual conference in Philadelphia – March 31 to April 2.  Mountain Valley’s attendees, Don Vardell, Carl Lovejoy, Jen Fullerton, Dr. Fran Moriarty, Dr. Alex Young and Jeanette Nogales, will have unsurpassed access to experts in clinical care and research, opportunities to network with colleagues from around the globe, and take away experiences that will enrich their work with MVTC residents.

MVTC will also be co-hosting a professional luncheon at the Racquet Club of Philadelphia on Friday, April 1. If you’d like to attend, please contact Carl Lovejoy at clovejoy@mountainvalleytreatment.org.

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Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities to Conduct Site Visit

Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation FacilitiesThe Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities (CARF) will be visiting Mountain Valley Treatment Center tomorrow and Friday. This visit by a team of CARF surveyors will be the capstone moment for a process that has included virtually all members of the MVTC leadership team over the course of the past twelve months. Mountain Valley is seeking CARF accreditation in addition to our current licensing by the State of New Hampshire to demonstrate our commitment to, among other things, the continuous improvement of both organizational management and institutional service delivery. One of the many benefits of CARF accreditation will be the improved ability for MVTC parents to receive insurance reimbursement.

CARF’s accreditation, research, continuous improvement services, and educational activities are conducted in accordance with these core values and with the utmost integrity. The upcoming consultative peer-review process will involve all members of the MVTC family – administrators, staff, parents and residents.

To learn more about CARF and the accreditation process, visit the CARF website at http://www.carf.org/home

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Dr. Jonathan Abramowitz, Exposure and Response Prevention Expert, to Speak at MVTC

Dr. Jonathan Abramowitz (http://www.jabramowitz.com/), internationally recognized expert in Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP) therapy for anxiety and OCD, will visit MVTC on February 4th and 5th to present  to and conduct trainings for our staff.

 Dr. Abramowitz is a co-author of Exposure Therapy for Anxiety: Principles and Practice.  This text is our key reference for the design and structure of MVTC’s clinical program and therapeutic milieu, including the training curriculum for our residential staff.  

 

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Jennifer Fullerton Receives NATSAP Excellence in Service Award

Congratulations to Mountain Valley’s Associate Executive Director for Administrative and Clinical Services, Jennifer Fullerton, for being honored last night with a National Association of Therapeutic Schools and Programs’ Excellence in Service Award.  Presented to Jen at the NATSAP Northeast Regional Conference in Kennebunkport, ME by Kelly Webster from the Grove School and MVTC’s Executive Director, Don Vardell, the Excellence in Service Award pays tribute to those staff members in NATSAP organizations who play vital roles “behind the scenes.”   We can’t think of a more deserving recipient – great job, Jen!

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MVTC Graduate Returns for Summer Internship to “Give Back”

Jake Leary, a proud Mountain Valley graduate, departed Monday having successfully completed a one-week internship here with us in Pike.  Jake contacted us in May to propose the internship, and we were thrilled to welcome him back to serve as a mentor – and an inspiration – for our current residents.  When asked why he wanted to return, Jake was quick to respond that “Mountain Valley has done so much for me, and this is an opportunity to give something back.”

Jake’s story is a familiar one.  As a school and social avoidant 13 year old, he had not stepped into a classroom in over three months. A perfectionist, Jake’s anxiety had spiked when teachers made mention of the need to earn high grades should he want to attend a competitive college – and the thought of taking the New York State Regents Examination overwhelmed him.  Working with an educational consultant, the Learys initially tried some day programs to help Jake with his issues, and even considered a wilderness therapy program – not the place, joked Jake, “for an overweight, anxious teenager!”  Then Jake and his parents were introduced to Mountain Valley.

Jake admits that, despite MVTC’s welcoming introduction, his initial reaction to going to a residential treatment center was negative.  Thankfully, his mother was convinced that MVTC could be helpful, and Jake, “silently aggravated,” agreed to make the trip to New Hampshire.  In a TRACKS session one afternoon, Jake shared with the current Mountain Valley residents that he was “miserable” during his first two week at Mountain Valley, and called his parents every night demanding to come home – but his mother “stayed strong,” and refused to come get him.

Jake was a resident at MVTC for 60 days, and is quick to tell any and all that his time here was transformational.  He returned home to his local high school ready to face inevitable challenges in a “logical” manner using skills he learned at Mountain Valley.  As a matter of fact, Jake still refers to his MVTC Group Therapy binder whenever he needs a refresher!

Now 3″ taller and 50 pounds lighter than when he was as a Mountain Valley resident, Jake looks forward to his senior year of  high school and confidently facing the challenges of a rigorous program of study coupled with the excitement of the college application process.  And while he has his sights set on a career in creative writing, perhaps he will return again someday to Mountain Valley, to inspire yet another generation of MVTC residents.