Certified Community Behavioral Health Clinics, or CCBHCs, are intended to be a one-stop shop for mental and behavioral health care.
Sierra Riesburg with the Behavioral Health Alliance of Montana says these clinics will be required to offer a range of services under one roof.
"24-hour mobile team, or outpatient mental health, or substance use services, psychiatric rehabilitation, peer support services."
Those services are currently available in Montana, but the health facilities providing them often do not get enough money back from Medicaid or Medicare to make them financially sustainable. Providers do not always offer every service someone might need.
"So someone in crisis might get stabilized but then they might fall through the gap before they can get into outpatient treatment," Riesburg says.
CCBHCs will be able to provide that care in one place, preventing more people from falling through the cracks of the mental health system. Extra federal dollars will also help financially stabilize these services.
According to the state’s application, four mental health providers across the state will participate in the program, which is expected to be up and running by October.
This content is sourced from
Montana Public Radio
. It reflects the author's views and has not been edited by our newsroom. It may have been generated using AI assistance.