A new program in Utah aims to help at-risk teens get through what the Salt Lake Tribune calls a "horrifying thought": "chain-smoking."
The Deseret News reports on the Teen Center, a network of schools that open to at-risk kids and offer everything from homework help to showers and laundry facilities.
The idea is to give teens a place to hang out and get help when they're feeling lonely or in need of it.
The Teen Center program is the work of the Policy Project, a nonprofit that has been pushing for such programs for years.
"Teen Centers are physical facilities in Utah schools that provide food pantries, laundry facilities and showers to meet the basic needs of students," the group's board member says in a statement.
"The ultimate goal of these centers is to help teenagers succeed in all areas of their lives."
In Utah, for example, more than one in five students has considered suicide, 18% have made a suicide plan, and 41.5% say they feel "sad or hopeless."
The Teen Centers are staffed by adults who help kids with homework, social work, and family advocacy.
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