Brain experts have also questions some treatments they say are unproven

Success of rehab center is mixed, with 80 per cent of patients relapsing

Diagnosed with depression, major anxiety, and panic disorder in remission, he was prescribed what Yellowbrick called 'nutraceuticals' aka vitamins

Patients include a student who tried to take his own life after his parents found out he'd lost his part-time job

The rehab center was founded ten years ago to specifically treat 'emerging adult' brains - millennials who had 'failed to launch' from their parents

, cleaning and even 'showing up' at Yellowbrick in Illinois

For $28,000 a month, patients will get taught basic life skills such as

We have all heard the stereotype; the fragile little snowflake millennial who cannot deal with the real world.

Well now an Illinois rehab center is charging the parents tens of thousands of dollars a month to teach their pampered millennials how to finally grow up.

For $28,000 a month, privileged 20-somethings who have failed to reach their 'true potential', will get basic life skills in scheduling, cleaning and even 'showing up', according to Fusion.

Therapy and group sessions are supplements by treatments such as art classes, yoga and meditation.

This Illinois rehab center is charging parents of pampered millennials almost $30,000 a month to teach them how to be an adult

Yellowbrick, in Evanston, was founded ten years ago to specifically treat 'emerging adult' brains, millennials who had 'failed to launch' from their parents.

Patients come to Yellowbrick with a variety of problems such as anxiety, depression, substance abuse, eating disorders, or even schizophrenia and bipolar disorder.

Many of those disorders are linked, or made worse, by sufferers being forced to take their first steps in the adult world.

Patients include the likes of one Ivy League college student who was doing well until his final semester when he found he 'could not bring himself' to turn in his final paper when faced with the end of school.

For $28,000 a month, patients will get basic life skills in scheduling, cleaning and even 'showing up' at the Illinois rehab center for over-privileged 20-somethings

A 22-year-old was admitted for trying to take his own life when his family found out he had lost his part-time job.

The student said he'd coasted through college and began lying about his failing grades.

He was diagnosed with depression, major anxiety, and panic disorder in remission and prescribed what Yellowbrick called 'nutraceuticals or brain vitamins', known as vitamins and health supplements to everyone else. The patient, who was taking anti-anxiety medications, was told to go to addiction therapy and trauma group.

Regular sleep cycles, visits to the gym, and square meals were known as 'brain hygiene' at Yellowbrick. Meanwhile lunch is referred to as 'Connections', rules are 'Community Agreements' and relationships are 'Coupling.'

Another former patient came to Yellowbrick in 2010 after she said she was drinking too much and struggling with an eating disorder at college.

After five relapses at the center, she finally decided to join an Alcoholics Anonymous group.

Yellowbrick, in Evanston, was founded ten years ago to specifically treat 'emerging adult' brains, millennials who had 'failed to launch' from their parents

Up to 16 people can live in the Yellowbrick residence; a four-story apartment building where patients live together in apartments in groups of three or four.

Staff members are never too far away however, to teach residents the basics such as shopping, cooking and cleaning.

The idea of millennials going away to learn independence, surrounded by staff and paid for by mum and dad, seems incongruous.

But staff say they help patients develop a sense of autonomy - to know when to ask for help and when to set out on their own.

Results of the center are mixed.

Four out of every five patients who seek treatment at the center will relapse.

'I don't know anyone who went to Yellowbrick who's like, 'I'm doing awesome!'' a patient told Osberg.

And the exorbitant costs of Yellowbrick have been widely criticized.

Up to 16 people can live in the Yellowbrick residence; a four-story apartment building where patients live together in apartments (pictured) in groups of three or four

Treatment and residence at the center costs an average of $28,000 a month. Meanwhile the initial health assessment alone costs $7,950.

Health insurance often won't cover the treatment while some of the options are unproven.

'They call it a center for clinical neuroscience, as if this is [all] scientifically founded,' Carrie Bearden, a brain science expert, told Osberg.

Treatments are complimented with the likes of yoga and meditation, massage, dramatic role-play, and art therapy.

Opinion of Yellowbrook among former patients is deeply divided.

One reviewer, named only as Ben, said that he had spent over a year at the center and 'I cannot overstate this, but YB saved my life.'

He said that the center had helped turn him from a 'suicidal, insecure, lonely and angry person' to someone who could 'take control of my life and be the person who I've always wanted to be.'

Yet others claim the center was just focused on making as much money out of its vulnerable patients as possible.