Eckerd Youth Alternatives is an industry leader in outdoor therapeutic programs for troubled teens not only because of our highly effective approach, but also because we’ve been working with troubled teens for almost 40 years.
Jack and Ruth Eckerd founded our very first residential adolescent treatment program for troubled boys in 1968 in Brooksville, Florida. The Eckerds believed an investment in children is an investment in the future of our country.
A Leader in Outdoor Therapy for Troubled Teens
At the time, the primary treatment option for troubled teens was hospitalization. The Eckerds believed troubled teens needed a better treatment alternative, one that was more holistic and provided long-lasting change. The Eckerd’s nurturing, outdoor therapy approach was viewed by some as hopelessly naive. The critics, however, were proven wrong, and the success of Eckerd Youth Alternatives’ first outdoor program paved the way for many more adolescent treatment programs for troubled boys and girls.
Eckerd Youth Alternatives now operates 18 outdoor therapy programs in seven states. Most are dedicated to serving youth referred by public agencies. However, two are dedicated to serving troubled teens privately referred by families and professionals. Eckerd Academy at Brooksville, Florida, Eckerd Academy of the Blue Ridge, GA and Eckerd Academy at Deer Lodge, Tennessee.
A National Leader in Youth Services
In the belief that every child deserves the opportunity to succeed, Eckerd Youth Alternatives has developed many other residential and community-based programs, as well to help at-risk and troubled youth. Today, it is considered to be one of the nation’s leading youth services organizations, serving at-risk and troubled youth through more than 40 residential and community-based programs in nine states. More information about other EYA programs is available on the Website. Throughout the years, one principle remains constant: the nurturing, caring environment in which kids learn to re-direct their behavior, take responsibility and return home to their families as better sons and daughters.