TAMHO - Behavioral Health News & Events Volume 2 Issue 1 | Page 12

Behavioral Health News & Events Volume 2, Issue 1 | January 2014 for the mission of the Sexual Assault Center of East Tennessee, consolidate costs for the community, and will help streamline services and partnerships in East Tennessee." The Helen Ross McNabb Center provides crisis services for individuals experiencing domestic violence, substance abuse and/or psychiatric crises, and also provides emergency shelter for individuals in crisis situations. “Sexual Assault Center of East Tennessee’s services align well with the Helen Ross McNabb Center’s current crisis continuum of care,” says Leann Human-Hilliard, HRMC Vice President of Clinical Services. “Merging operations will enhance crisis services in our community and strengthen our response to individuals who have been sexually assaulted and affected by trauma.” SACET will be recognized as a service of the Helen Ross McNabb Center. The ultimate goal of the merger is to increase and strengthen services for individuals and families during crisis situations and to seamlessly connect those individuals to quality support and after care services. The Helen Ross McNabb Center is a premier not‐for‐profit provider of behavioral health services in East Tennessee. Since 1948, the Center has provided quality and compassionate care to children, adults and families experiencing mental illness, addiction and social challenges. As the Center begins its 65th year of providing services to communities in East Tennessee, its mission remains clear and simple; “Improving the lives of the people we serve.” For more information, visit www.mcnabbcenter.org or call 865‐637‐9711. Centerstone Looks to Heal Body and Mind with new Nashville Facility Nonprofit mental health provider hopes to set standard in care Centerstone is opening a behavioral health campus in Berry Hill. CEO Bob Vero stands on the outline of the old Home for Crippled Children, which was built by the women of Nashville's Junior League in 1923. / John Partipilo / The Tennessean “Individuals with serious and persistent mental illnesses are more likely to be seen by specialty mental health providers, but they have limited access to effective medical care and high mortality rates, underscoring the need for better connections across primary care and mental health,” the report says. The building Centerstone’s new building is physically designed to enable that kind of connection. Patients can literally walk down the hall from a therapy room, for example, to its primary care treatment area. In 2013, Centerstone formed a joint venture with Unity Physician Partners to offer primary care in its behavioral health facilities across the country. A nod to the past WRITTEN BY SHELLEY DUBOIS THE TENNESSEAN, EDITED Centerstone, the nation’s largest nonprofit mental health provider, will open a new state-of-the-art behavioral health facility in Nashville next month. But it’s more than just a new building: Centerstone hopes to use it to break new ground in mental health research, finding novel ways to treat both physical and mental health that can be duplicated in centers around the country. The space also is a tribute, of sorts, to a piece of Nashville’s health history. In the yard behind the building — located between homes, businesses and Highway 65 — is the outline for the old Home for Crippled Children, which was built by the women of Nashville’s Junior League in 1923, only one year after the Nashville group was created. The new building is on a plot of land previously owned by the Junior League, off White Avenue in Berry Hill. Centerstone is calling the building and surrounding area the Dede Wallace Campus, after a prominent Nashville Junior League member. At the time, “it wasn’t common for women to lead companies and hold offices — we had just been given the right to vote,” said Catherine Beemer, the president of Nashville’s Junior League. And yet, “these were women who left their own homes to go care for children who were chronically ill.” Centerstone executives want to use Nashville’s Dede Wallace Campus to bridge the gap between treatments for mind and body, bringing the capability to care for both under one roof. Nashville’s Junior League, still quite active, was a top donor for Centerstone’s Dede Wallace Campus, which cost $6 million. That gap is a key issue when studying our nation’s health care woes. In 2013, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services released a report on collaborative care, explaining that while mental health disorders are common and costly, only 25 percent of patients with these issues receive proper treatment. As a nod to the League’s history, Centerstone named its new facility after the late, prominent Nashville Junior League member Louise “Dede” Bullard Wallace, a Harpeth Hall alumna who was known for her passion about caring for people with mental health problems. The Junior League opened a facility to treat children Page 12