Home Mental Health Coming Soon: A New Crisis Residential Treatment Facility in Eureka Offering Mental Health Services, Case Management and More | Lost Coast Outpost

Coming Soon: A New Crisis Residential Treatment Facility in Eureka Offering Mental Health Services, Case Management and More | Lost Coast Outpost

by Universalwellnesssystems


From left: DHHS Legislative and Policy Manager Nancy Stark, Senator Mike McGuire, Humboldt County Supervisor District 4 Natalie Arroyo, DHHS Behavioral Health Director Emi Botzler Rogers, Willow Glen Project Manager David Gilbert and Humboldt County Supervisor District 1 Rex Vaughn. | Image from Humboldt County DHHS.

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Humboldt County will soon have a new resource in its efforts to help those suffering from serious mental illness. Opening later this summer, the Hyperion Crisis Residential Treatment Facility, located at 528 N. St. in Eureka, will provide around-the-clock care for people who would otherwise be sent to Sempervirens Psychiatric Hospital or forced to fend for themselves at home or on the streets.

“Not only will this facility improve a neighborhood that has long been in disrepair, it will provide a safe place for people to get stabilized and receive the medical care they need,” said Natalie Arroyo, Humboldt County Supervisor, District 4. Outpost on mail.

Initially funded by a $2 million loan from the state, the facility will provide patients with lodging, meals and a range of services, including psychiatric treatment, case management and access to housing resources, all billable through Medicare.

Jack Breazeale, deputy director of behavioral health for the Humboldt County Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS), said many of the people housed at Sempervirens (also known as SVs) are housed there with severe disabilities and poverty, “meaning they’re there because they’ve lost the ability to take care of themselves and meet their basic needs.”

Many of these people are homeless and suffer from substance use disorders in addition to mental illness. “So it’s not a good place to be,” Breazeale said. “So it’s unreasonable to think that SV is going to solve everything in their lives in a few days.”

People can stay at the crisis residential treatment facility for up to 45 days. The average stay at similar facilities across the state is about two weeks. Because it’s an outpatient facility, people can leave at any time, but those who stay are assigned a case manager, therapist and psychiatrist, and are linked to other outpatient services.

The facility, housed in a renovated two-story building, can accommodate 10 patients at a time in five double-occupancy rooms. The county contracted with a Yuba City-based nonprofit organization. Willow Glen Care Center Willow Glen will operate the center with its own staff of nurses, case managers and mental health workers, and joins more than a half-dozen similar crisis care centers it already operates in Northern California.

“We are grateful to the staff at Willow Glen for their work around the clock to support those staying at the facility and the community surrounding the facility,” Arroyo said. “We are so grateful to our funders and partners in this effort!”

Breazeale detailed who would benefit most from the new facility and the services it would provide: Some patients had recently been discharged from Sempervirens, but without further support, Decompensation They then quickly fall back into the thoughts and behaviors that got them hospitalized.

Others may, for example, be brought to a local emergency department but, upon assessment, find that they do not meet the criteria for involuntary admission. 5150 Psychiatric hospitalization. Hospital employees and other medical professionals can recommend a stay at Hyperion, potentially avoiding the need for acute hospitalization.

Meanwhile, Sempervirens Hospital’s 16 beds are often full, and Breazeale said he has high hopes the new Hyperion Centre will alleviate some of that pressure.

“I’m really excited,” he said. “It’s finally happening.”

A significant portion of those held in Sempervirens are placed under the legal guardianship of the county. Lanterman-Petris-Short (LPS) assayThese people are sometimes housed as SVs because the county has been unable to find a long-term care facility, and Breazeale said once Hyperion opens, some of these patients will be able to stay there while they wait.

A big benefit of the facility, he added, is that it will help ensure residents are taking their medication as prescribed.

“Typically, we lose patients because of medication adherence,” Breazeale said. “Here, they get at least 14 days of consistent medication in their system, they get on a cadence, and they have a case manager with them. [who will] We will take them to the pharmacy to pick up their medication and then take them home.”

Residents can also access health screenings and other appointments through the Open Door Community Health Center.

The care provided at the facility is covered by Medicare reimbursement; Mental Health Services ActA tax on millionaires passed by California voters in 2004.

The county hopes to open the Hyperion Crisis Residential Treatment Facility by Aug. 1.

“We’re excited about the impact this initiative will have on our Sempervirens levels, our local emergency rooms and the community at large,” Breazeale said. “It will really ease congestion and allow people to get the help they need.”

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