Just over one month after attempting suicide, Paris Jackson, the daughter of late pop star Michael Jackson, has left the hospital and is set to enter a residential treatment center for further care, according to People Magazine.

"The feeling is that Paris is still a danger to herself," a source told the mag. "Both Katherine and Debbie want her to get the help that she needs."

The 15-year-old's mother, Debbie Rowe, and grandmother, Katherine Jackson, reportedly selected the out-of-state facility with the help of UCLA doctors.

While the name of the treatment center has not been revealed, The Daily Beast had previously reported that the teen would be transferred to the Diamond Ranch Academy, a Utah-based facility that works with young adults struggling with depression.

"Paris is doing good right now, but everyone is really worried she'll do it again because she was so unhappy," a family member told The Daily Beast. "No one believes that changed in just a few weeks, even with the best of treatment."

Jackson's suicide attempt occurred on June 5 when she reportedly cut her wrists and took an overdose of ibuprofen.

Family speculated that she was overwhelmed by bullies at school, and also by the wrongful-death lawsuit her grandmother had filed in response to her father's 2009 overdose. Jackson was also being taunted on social media, a source said.

"She was on Twitter nonstop, and a lot of what was coming back to her was very negative and critical. She was constantly being told she was ugly or funny looking, or told she came from a crazy family," a source said. "She just couldn't handle that and everything else going on in her life," the source noted, continuing on to say that it wouldn't have happened under the watchful eye of her father.

"Let's be clear there would have been no Twitter, no Facebook...if Michael were still alive," said a family member. "He knew the dangers of letting too many people into your world too soon."