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Statement of Purpose
Cove PREP is a Secure Care facility that exists to treat adolescent males, ages 12-20, who have
committed sexual offenses. Cove PREP's vision is to provide state-of-the-art, research-based
assessment and treatment for adolescent male sexual offenders. Cove PREP is guided by the
following Mission Statement:
Cove PREP provides care in a secure setting with a commitment to:
Protecting the safety of community, residents and employees
Reducing the likelihood of future sexual offenses
Addressing the individual needs of a complex and multi-problem population
Providing accurate and understandable information to involved court systems, if any, to assist their efforts to protect community safety
Preparing residents for reintegration into the community
Helping parents or other caregivers to obtain the information and skills necessary to assist youthful offenders to achieve and maintain an offense-free lifestyle
Philosophy of Service
Cove PREP's treatment philosophy is based on the belief that sexual offending results from a
combination of biological, social, psychological and experiential factors. Sexual offenders
are not all the same. Therefore, comprehensive assessment is required to develop an
understanding the causes, contributing factors and what maintains each youth's pattern of
sexually abusive behaviors. Successful treatment is based on accurate diagnosis.
Treatment effectiveness is affected by a number of factors, including:
The type of offender
The frequency and length of time they have been engaging in sexually abusive behavior
The type and severity of coexisting mental health and/or character pathology, if any
The degree to which the individual views their behavior as a problem
The individual's capacity to understand the effects of their actions on others
The availability of structure and relationships to support a non-offending lifestyle
Treatment of sexual offending is not considered as a "cure". However, with appropriate intervention
and treatment, effective interventions can provide individuals with tools to manage their thoughts
and behavior, and eliminate &/or control any deviant arousal patterns. These youth can learn to
develop non-exploitive relationships and deal with triggering emotions and situations in appropriate
ways.
Cove PREP operates from several basic assumptions and values regarding sexual offending:
Sexually abusive behavior is learned behavior that occurs when the developmental course of
normal human sexual behavior is disrupted by sexual victimization, physical or emotional abuse
or neglect; premature exposure to sexually explicit behavior or materials, lack of appropriate
knowledge or understanding of human sexuality; inappropriate use of sexual behavior as a
expression of anger or other strong emotions; and/or, impaired ability to control behavior due
to mental illness, mental retardation or profound deficits in social and emotional maturity.
Individuals are responsible for their sexual offenses and the harm caused to others,
regardless of how their pattern of sexually abusive behavior developed, i.e. past victimization
may have contributed to the development of sexually abusive behavior, but does not excuse or
justify victimizing others.
Effective treatment focuses on improving an individual's ability to control and manage
thoughts, feelings and choices. Appropriate treatment of mental illness, if present, is
foundational to enabling individuals to address their sexual offending. Identification and
remediation of, or adaptation for, specific learning disabilities is also essential to the
provision of effective treatment.
Sexually abusive behavior patterns within an individual generally follow a predictable
pattern of thoughts, fantasy, opportunity, victim selection, action and use of cognitive distortions
to excuse offending. These patterns, the events that trigger offending behavior, and high-risk
situations and behavior can be identified, understood and managed to reduce the likelihood of
re-offending.
Individuals who have developed deviant patterns of sexual arousal can manage these patterns
through the systematic use of techniques designed to reduce deviant sexual arousal.
Treatment must be based on the individual needs of the client; therefore, the length of
stay should be variable and the treatment interventions utilized must be determined on an
individual basis. Individuals should be served in the least restrictive environment that can
effectively meet their needs while protecting community safety.
Adolescents placed in secure care may have extensive histories of prior placements outside the
home, and often have severely disrupted family relationships. To the extent possible, family,
guardians or caregivers should be included in the adolescent's treatment, unless prohibited by
court order or child protective agencies.
Cove PREP will work with representatives of the juvenile court system, child protective
services or other concerned parties to facilitate effective planning and management of the
adolescents served, both while at Cove PREP and to facilitate transition to step-down
facilities or reintegration into the community.
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