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San Mateo County to implement CARE Court strategy to provide critical mental health services

San Mateo County to implement CARE Court strategy to provide critical mental health services
San Mateo County is launching CARE Court, a new strategy to provide critical mental health, housing and other services to people suffering from schizophrenia and other untreated psychotic disorders.

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San Mateo County is launching a new strategy to provide critical mental health, housing and other services to people living with schizophrenia and other untreated psychotic disorders, called CARE Court.

Local officials believe the new CARE Court program, which will begin locally on July 1, is key to helping vulnerable people get the treatment they need while reducing the homelessness crisis.  

Established by Senate Bill 1338 and endorsed by Governor Gavin Newsom, the Community Assistance, Recovery and Empowerment (CARE) Act seeks to end the odyssey of homelessness, short-term psychiatric hospitalization, and incarceration of those suffering from serious untreated mental illnesses.

CARE Court connects a person struggling with untreated mental illness (and often substance use issues as well) with a court-ordered care plan for up to 24 months. 

Each plan is administered by a care team in the community and may include clinically prescribed individualized interventions with various support services, medications, and a housing plan.

The client-centered approach also includes a public advocate and support to help make self-directed care decisions, in addition to your full clinical team.

The outpatient program is intended to be an intervention for residents with more severe disabilities, allowing them to remain in their community to stabilize, begin healing, and emerge from homelessness in a less restrictive environment.

“The community framework of the CARE Court program aligns with Behavioral Health and Recovery Services' vision to improve care within our community and support recovery with compassion and respect,” said Dr. Jei Africa, director of Behavioral Health and Recovery Services. County Behavioral Health and Recovery Department.

?The ability to access essential behavioral health services in a community setting versus an institutional setting helps clients and their families engage in treatment while remaining close to their support system. "We see CARE Court as another tool to help people connect with services in their recovery process," he added.

A court-ordered response under the CARE Act may be initiated by a family member, a mental or behavioral health professional, a first responder, or a person seeking assistance, for example. That can start the process of enrolling someone in the state-funded program.

The July 1 launch places San Mateo County among the first in California to implement the program ahead of the state-imposed deadline of December 2024.

The Behavioral Health and Recovery Services CARE team can partner with clients and families to answer questions, support the petition process, and help them toward recovery. To contact the CARE team, call 650-372-6125 or email CAREBHRS@smcgov.org. To read more about the CARE process in San Mateo County, click here.

Additional support, such as a Family Resource Guide, how to complete a petition, and training materials, can be accessed through the CARE Act Resource Center at care-act.org.

You may be interested in: Medi-Cal: The importance of mental health

Pamela Cruz
Pamela Cruz
Editor-in-Chief of Peninsula 360 Press. A communicologist by profession, but a journalist and writer by conviction, with more than 10 years of media experience. Specialized in medical and scientific journalism at Harvard and winner of the International Visitors Leadership Program scholarship from the U.S. government.

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