Two elderly Virginia residents with serious mental illnesses are getting a new home thanks to a $95,000 grant from the Virginia Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services.
The grant will pay for their housing, medications, and transportation once they leave state psychiatric hospitals, the Washington Post reports.
"If we did not have this funding available right now, they would need to wait until a slot in the [Regional Older Adults Facility Mental Health Support Team] program became available or clinical staff identified another option," says a spokesman for Arlington County's Department of Human Services, which will manage the grant.
The 10-person RAFT team works with assisted living and nursing home facilities to provide community treatment for people with serious mental illness or dementia who have been hospitalized or are at risk of hospitalization.
The program has a 90% satisfaction rate among clients and partners, according to a recent survey, in which several people shared their gratitude for the program and its staff.
Each year, RAFT receives $500,000 from DBHDS.
The 10-person team works to provide community treatment options to people ages 65 and older who have a diagnosis of serious mental illness or dementia and who either have been hospitalized in a psychiatric facility or are at risk of hospitalization.
It served 106 clients last fiscal year, up from 73 the year prior
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