A number of Bay Area hospitals have
banded together with city officials to try to help the toughest cases
among San Francisco’s homeless.
The
San Francisco Healing Center, a new 54-bed psychiatric facility,
occupies an entire floor at St. Mary’s hospital and is intended to serve
the city’s most vulnerable individuals: those suffering from severe
mental illness or addiction, who are also some of the most difficult to
channel off the streets and into stable housing.
Businesses
in San Francisco have been concerned about the impact of the city’s
sizable homeless population for years, especially as both residents and
tourists continue to note aggressive behavior, open drug use and needles
littering streets in surveys.
While
the new center will not solve homelessness, it will add more resources
and the center could be a model that’s scaled up in the future. It’s
designed for a spectrum of treatment that includes 24-hour nursing and
psychiatric care, counseling, medical treatment, community support and
activities, and individual recovery and discharge planning.
“We have all worked together really well in trying to get this facility off the ground,” said Barbara Garcia,
director of health at San Francisco’s Department of Public Health,
which is involved in the project. “It’ll be providing mental health
support, vocational training — it really is a recovery model.”
The
center will double the city’s number of conversatorship beds. Granted
by a judge, conservatorships are assigned in cases where an individual
is mentally ill or drug addicted — or both — and unable to live
independently. Previously, individuals who couldn’t be accommodated
needed to wait for placement in out-of-county facilities, hospitals or
jail.
What makes the center’s
approach unique, according to Crestwood Behavioral Health Executive Vice
President Patricia Blum, are practices that take into account multiple
factors. Crestwood Behavioral Health is one of the partners involved in
the project.
“We use really
promising, evidence-based practices that include trauma-informed
services, with a focus on treating trauma and not just the diagnosis,”
she said. “We also use an employment model, helping to connect people
with jobs in the community. If people have a meaningful role and
purpose, there’s a significant impact.”
Although the number of beds is
relatively small when compared to the city’s homeless population of
nearly 7,000 — 40 beds, plus an additional 14 beds available to outside
providers to purchase — getting help to more people should help both
them and the city.
“We’re here as a
business community worried about the very future of San Francisco’s
brand,” Joe D’Alessandro, president and CEO of San Francisco Travel told
the Business Times in 2016. In the past several months, property owners
in both the Financial District and western SoMa have started working on
creating community benefit districts to combat homelessness and dirty
streets.
The 40 beds are for
individuals who wind up in inpatient treatment through conservatorships.
Conservatorships have been relatively rare until now, but they may also
be expanding if SB 1045, a state Senate bill sponsored by Sens. Scott
Wiener and Henry Stern, is successful. The bill proposes broadening the
authority of counties to assign conservatorships to individuals who are
too impaired by mental illness or severe drug addiction to care for
themselves.
Wiener said that
strengthening conservatorship laws for “extreme cases” are a necessary
lever for getting chronically homeless into treatment.
“Here
in San Francisco our public health officials and community
organizations have been working tirelessly, but they need more tools to
help the people that are suffering on our streets,” he said.
If
the bill is successful, San Francisco Healing Center may serve as a
particularly important partnership model for connecting some of the
city’s neediest to a network of care beyond an initial hospital stay.
The
healing center is a public-private partnership between the San
Francisco Department of Public Health, Dignity Health, UCSF Health and
Crestwood Behavioral Health.
The
Department led the partnership, and will oversee the center and
contribute $5 million per year to its operations. Dignity Health
contributed the space. UCSF Health contributed $1 million toward
renovations and programming. The program will be run by Crestwood
Behavioral Health, a longtime partner of the city of San Francisco in
providing mental health and addiction care.
“It’s
difficult to find space in San Francisco. We were fortunate to find an
empty space in a hospital, and I’m working right now on the potential
for adding more beds,” Garcia said. “Having the facility on a hospital
campus, individuals are a bit more protected and have access to more
resources.”
Full Article & Source:
New mental health center doubles conservatorship beds in city for seriously ill
2 comments:
When these people are treated and recover, who is getting them out of conservatorship?
No one, Barbara, just like what's happening to people now who no longer need guardianship.
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