From Deseret News archives:
'Holding' therapist is killed
Death of VanBloem in crash may put an end to treatment in Utah
And the type of therapy he spent much of his professional life practicing and passionately defending known as holding therapy may have died with him, at least in Utah.
The day before VanBloem was killed, he announced that the two therapists who helped him run the Cascade Center for Family Growth in Orem were leaving but that he would carry on the fight to continue practicing holding therapy in Utah.
Cascade is the state's lone provider of holding therapy.
VanBloem had just finished a therapy session when he was killed. Leaving the Ranches subdivision about 6 p.m., he turned onto U-73 near Eagle Mountain, when his vehicle was struck by an oncoming truck. He died at the scene.
VanBloem was traveling to a birthday party at Cascade for one of his employees and was driving alone. No one else was injured.
"It's tragic. He was a father with children and a wife," said Utah County Sheriff's Sgt. Spencer Cannon. "There was no suspicion of anything unusual; it was just one of those tragic accidents."
VanBloem is survived by his seven children, all of whom are still living at home, and his wife.
"This man did everything he could to help children in spite of all the opposition he had," VanBloem's sister, Naidra Rowland, said. "He had just finished working with children, and that's when he got killed. He died doing what he loved and believed in."
Other family members and friends contacted Saturday were too distraught to talk.
One of VanBloem's daughters answered the phone at his residence and through tears said her father was "a man everybody loved."
VanBloem was scheduled to appear before the state's Division of Occupational and Professional Licensing, which monitors licensed therapists in Utah, next month. The state has been investigating VanBloem since 1997 when a former client at Cascade complained of abuse at the center. A petition filed in 2002 by the state Attorney General's Office sought to revoke VanBloem's license.
The petition alleged that during holding therapy sessions, VanBloem and another therapist, Jennie Gwilliam, lay on top of children face-to-face to induce "belly breathing." VanBloem and other therapists would then restrain the child by "methods including sitting on the child's legs or wrapping the child in a blanket," the petition states.
The state alleged that VanBloem then used his hands and knuckles to press into the child's abdomen and ribs, causing pain. One mother of an 8-year-old patient reported finding bruises on her daughter after therapy sessions.















