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Journal Article

Citation

Eldredge D, Langenecker SA, Lucynski RK, Schreiner MW. Focus (Am. Psychiatr. Publ.) 2022; 20(3): 285-291.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2022, American Psychiatric Publishing)

DOI

10.1176/appi.focus.20220047

PMID

37205019

PMCID

PMC10172528

Abstract

Our country is facing a resurgence of behavioral health crises from over the past 30 years, further illuminated and exacerbated by the global COVID-19 pandemic. Increasing suicide crises among youths over recent decades, untreated anxiety and depression, and serious mental illness are signs of the need for improvements in accessible, affordable, timely, and comprehensive behavioral health services. Against the backdrop of high suicide rates and low behavioral health services in Utah, statewide collaborators aligned with a common goal: deliver crisis services to anyone, anytime, and anywhere. After its initiation in 2011, the integrated behavioral health crisis response system continued to expand and excel, ultimately improving access and referral to services, flattening suicide rates, and reducing stigma. The global pandemic further motivated the expansion of Utah's crisis response system. This review focuses on the unique experiences of the Huntsman Mental Health Institute as a catalyst and partner in these changes. Our goals are to: inform about unique Utah partnerships and actions in the crisis mental health space, describe initial steps and outcomes, highlight continuing challenges, discuss pandemic-specific barriers and opportunities, and explore the long-term vision to improve quality and access to mental health resources.


Language: en

Keywords

Utah; Behavioral health care; Crisis intervention; Crisis mental health services; Global pandemic; Rapid evolution

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