Friday, July 26, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Friday, July 26, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Senate panel begins city youth home probe Center 'staff' questionable By JEFF DAY special To The Daily WASHINGTON - The federal agency which is paying the. medical costs for about two- thirds of the patients at the University Center is cutting off all funding to the facility within a month, it was announced yes- terday. The announcement came from the director of the controversial Ann Arbor facility, Dr. Arnold Kambly during testimony before a Senate subcommittee investi- gating the Civilian Health Medi- cal Programs of the Uniformed Services (CHAMPUS). CHAMPUS is a Department of Defense program which pays for the medical expenses of de- pendants of military personnel if they require treatment not available at a local military hospital. The center treats emo- tionally disturbed adolescent males. The announcement came as Senate investigators revealed the results of their probe which cited .the University Center for deceptive billing techniques, punitive treatment, and failure to control illegal drug use among patients. Committee investigator David Vienna charged that the Univer- sity Center had billed patients: -$87,000 in residential fees for some 200 days during which, the patients were not there; -$21,000 for personal therapy sessions for patients who were not there when the treatment was supposed to have occurred. -$16,000 for treatment Kam- bly was supposed to have per- formed at the center on dates when his records show he was out of the state. KAMBLY vigorously denied the charges saying that fees were' collected for patients' en- tire stays at the center-whether or not they were in attendence the entire time. The patients he said, were informed of this in advance. He also denied the discrep- ancies in billings and said the allegations were the result of a bookkeeping system w h i c h charged students on basis of scheduled meetings. If the meet- ing was missed, the student was billed and the meeting was re-scheduled. Kambly denied he had charg- ed patients for services per- formed when he was out-of- state, again citing his bookkeep- ing system. He claimed that during his travels he had flown back once a week, to conduct therapy sessions. IN SWORN testimony before the committee, Samuel Davis, executive director of the Mich- igan Association for Emotion- ally Disturbed Children- charged that the use of seculsion rooms for patients at Kambly's institu- tion was punitive. "Especially punitive, harmful and foolish is the use of seclu- sion units," he said. "On the day of our visit there were four children in these rooms. One boy was in his room for three months. The notion of putting a child away for a couple of months seems to me to be grossly improper." KAMBLY claimed the criti- cism of the program was due to the misunderstanding of the word "seclusion." He indicated that since nurses and visitors were allowed in the rooms which he says are well- furnished and carpeted. The child is never really isolated, Kambly said. "We have found that the lim- ited use of our seclusion unit appears to be more humane and effective as a treatment than the heavy use of tranquilizers, leatherarestraints, shock therapy or other methods," he said. Hut Kambly did not deny re- ports by investigatorstthat there was an 8' x 8' x 8' unfurnished room in the facility's unventi- lated basement which was al- legedly used for punishment. One patient was reportedly locked in the room for 16 hours and forced to urinate on the floor because no one would let him out to use the bathroom. Kambly also denied charges of rampant drug use saying: "We feel drug abuse is a symp- tom of some underlying path- ology. If we were to discharge every patient who became in- volved in drug usage it would be equivalent to discharging a patient from a hospital because he had a broken leg." Order Your Subscription Todav (Continued fron Page 11 criteria for determining consult- ing appointments, but added "I would be shocked if a consul- tant was not aware of that status." DR. FRANK Riter, who works at St. Joseph's Mercy Hospital, saidthe has treated severaltof the center's residents in the last five years and that he was ask- ed by letter to serve on a "con- sulting basis" for the facility. "I had forgotten all about it," Ritter said. In retrospect, that procedure seemed "very peculiar," he added. Two of the physicians who Kambly claims are staff con- sultants could not be located because they apparently do not practice medicine in the Wash- tenaw County area. Generally, the doctors were very emphatic in denying any sort of involvement with either Kambly or the center. Several of them claimed they did not even know where the facility is located. ONE DOCTOR, who wished to remain anonymous because he did not- want his name in any way mentioned in connection. with the institution, claims he has never seen Kambly on a professional basis and that their only contact has. been at a "couple social gatherings." "What's the University Cen- ter? The center for the perform- ing arts?" he replied when ask- ed about his alleged connection with the facility. "'Oh, you mean the place that's been in the newspapers," he said. "I've seen maybe one or two of Kambly's patients in my office during the last couple years and they've never come back for repeat visits." 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