PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Most mental health crisis services did not increase following 988 crisis hotline launch

Strategies needed to boost availability of crisis services at mental health treatment facilities

2025-01-29
(Press-News.org) The launch of the nation’s 988 mental health hotline did not coincide with significant and equitable growth in the availability of most crisis services, except for a small increase in peer support services, according to a new RAND study.

Examining reports from thousands of mental health treatment facilities about the types of crisis services offered before and after the July 2022 rollout of the 988 hotline, researchers found that there was an increase in peer support services, a significant decrease in psychiatric walk-in services, and small declines in mobile crisis response and suicide prevention services.

Significant variation across states was observed in service availability trends before and after 988. The findings are published in the journal JAMA Psychiatry.

“The lack of meaningful growth in most crisis services may limit the long-run success of 988, in particular if callers feel that reaching out to 988 fails to result in access to appropriate sources of care,” said Jonathan Cantor, lead author of the study and a policy researcher at RAND, a nonprofit research organization. 

“Mental health officials and policymakers should consider strategies to boost the financing and availability of crisis services at mental health treatment facilities to meet increased demand generated by the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline,” Cantor said. 

The 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline provides an easy-to-remember phone number to access trained crisis counselors and emergency mental health services. It replaced the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline, which had been reachable via an 800 phone number and was narrowly focused on suicide as opposed to mental health crises more broadly. 

The 988 crisis line is intended to complement other forms of mental health emergency response services and connect callers with a variety of mental health services on the crisis care continuum.

However, mental health emergency response systems may not be amenable to rapid change despite increases in demand prompted by 988. In particular, the U.S. continues to contend with a shortage of psychiatric beds in many regions, as well as a limited and unevenly distributed mental health care workforce.

RAND researchers evaluated the availability of crisis services offered by mental health treatment facilities throughout the U.S. from November 2021 through June 2023.

Information came from details reported by licensed mental health treatment facilities to the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. RAND has aggregated that data over time to create the longitudinal Mental health and Addiction Treatment Tracking Repository. The study included information from a large sample of reports from more than 15,000 mental health treatment facilities nationally.

The largest changes were observed for peer support services, which increased from being available at 39% of facilities prior to 988 to 42% afterward, and for availability of emergency psychiatric walk-in services, which declined from 32% to 29%.

The availability of other service types at mental health treatment facilities also declined at the national level. Mobile crisis response dropped from being provided by 22% of facilities before the rollout of 988 to being offered by 21% afterward. The availability of suicide prevention services dropped from 69% to 68% over the period.

There were also significant differences observed in crisis service availability based on facility characteristics. For example, public facilities had the highest odds of offering each of the four crisis services, followed by not-for-profit facilities. For-profit facilities, which comprised about one-quarter of the sample, consistently had the most-limited services.

State-level rates of suicide prevention services remained the same for most states over the study period. The largest increase in the availability of suicide prevention services was seen in Montana (11.5% increase), and the largest decline in availability was in Rhode Island (11.4% decrease). 

In contrast, most states experienced an increase in the number of facilities offering peer support services. The largest gain in offering of peer support services was in Kansas (19.6% increase) and the largest decline in peer support services was found in Georgia (3.2% decrease).  

Support for the study came from the National Institute of Mental Health. Other authors of the study are Megan S. Schuler, Rose Kerber and Ryan K. McBain, all of RAND, and Jonathan Purtle of New York University. 

RAND Health Care promotes healthier societies by improving health care systems in the United States and other countries.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

D-CARE study finds no differences between dementia care approaches on patient behavioral symptoms or caregiver strain

2025-01-29
New research comparing different approaches to dementia care for people with Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias found no significant differences in patient behavioral symptoms or caregiver strain, whether delivered through a health system, provided by a community-based organization, or as usual care over an 18-month period. However, the Dementia Care Study, also known as D-CARE, also found that caregiver self-efficacy—a measurement of caregivers’ confidence in managing dementia-related challenges and accessing support — improved in both the health-system and community-based ...

Landmark genetic study: Fresh shoots of hope on the tree of life

Landmark genetic study: Fresh shoots of hope on the tree of life
2025-01-29
In the most comprehensive global analysis of genetic diversity ever undertaken, an international team of scientists has found that the genetic diversity is being lost across the globe but that conservation efforts are helping to safeguard species. The landmark study, published in the pre-eminent scientific journal Nature, was led by Associate Professor Catherine Grueber from the School of Life and Environmental Sciences and a team of researchers from countries including the UK, Sweden, Poland, Spain, Greece and China. The data spans more than three decades (from 1985-2019) and looks at 628 species of animals, plants and fungi across all terrestrial ...

Discovery of a unique drainage and irrigation system that gave way to the “Neolithic Revolution” in the Amazon

Discovery of a unique drainage and irrigation system that gave way to the “Neolithic Revolution” in the Amazon
2025-01-29
A pre-Columbian society in the Amazon developed a sophisticated agricultural engineering system that allowed them to produce maize throughout the year, according to a recent discovery by a team of researchers from the Institute of Environmental Science and Technology (ICTA-UAB) and the Department of Prehistory at the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, (Spain); the Universities of Exeter, Nottingham, Oxford, Reading and Southampton (UK); the University of São Paulo (Brazil) and Bolivian collaborators. This finding contradicts previous theories that dismissed the possibility of intensive monoculture agriculture in the region. The study, published today ...

Racial and ethnic disparities in pediatric counseling on nutrition, lifestyle, and weight

2025-01-29
About The Study: This secondary analysis of the BP-CATCH trial found that among children with high blood pressure measurements, racial and ethnic disparities in receiving nutrition, lifestyle, and all 3 counseling topics were significant, although no significant disparities in receipt of weight counseling were noted. Racial disparities in receipt of counseling were not observed in participants with and without obesity.  Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Moonseong Heo, PhD, email mheo@clemson.edu. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2024.56238) Editor’s ...

Longitudinal analysis of obesity drug use and public awareness

2025-01-29
About The Study: This repeated cross-sectional study including 69.2 million obesity management drug dispensed prescriptions revealed an increase from 0.76 million in July 2017 to 1.5 million in February 2024, with an upward trend in monthly phentermine and glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonist prescriptions. There was a robust positive correlation between public online search activity for semaglutide and tirzepatide and their prescription trends. The joint surge in prescriptions and online searches ...

Mental health disparities by sexual orientation and gender identity in the All of Us Research Program

2025-01-29
About The Study: In this cross-sectional study of participants in the All of Us Research Program, there were significant mental health disparities between participants in sexual and gender minority (SGM) and cisgender heterosexual (non-SGM) groups. These findings underscore the need for tailored mental health interventions to improve the well-being of SGM populations, while noting that the associations do not imply causality but reflect the stigma and minority stress experienced by these individuals.  Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Marvin E. Langston, PhD, email marvlang@stanford.edu. To access the embargoed study: Visit ...

Research contrasts drought sensitivity of Eurasian and North American grasslands

Research contrasts drought sensitivity of Eurasian and North American grasslands
2025-01-29
EMBARGO: THIST CONTENT IS UNDER EMBARGO UNTIL 11 AM U.S. EASTERN STANDARD TIME ON JANUARY 29, 2025. INTERESTED MEDIA MAY RECIVE A PREVIEW COPY OF THE JOURNAL ARTICLE IN ADVANCE OF THAT DATE OR CONDUCT INTERVIEWS, BUT THE INFORMATION MAY NOT BE PUBLISHED, BROADCAST, OR POSTED ONLINE UNTIL AFTER THE RELEASE WINDOW.  Grasslands in Asia and North America differ in their responses to drought, according to a new paper in the journal Nature led by faculty at Colorado State University. The findings show that differences in the dominant grasses and lower species diversity in the Eurasian Steppe grasslands may make it more vulnerable to drought ...

Life’s building blocks in Bennu samples

Life’s building blocks in Bennu samples
2025-01-29
Japanese collaborators detected all five nucleobases — building blocks of DNA and RNA — in samples returned from asteroid Bennu by NASA’s OSIRIS-REx mission. Asteroids, small airless bodies within the inner Solar System, are theorized to have contributed water and chemical building blocks of life to Earth billions of years ago. Although meteorites on Earth come from asteroids, the combination of exposure to moisture in the atmosphere and to an uncontrolled biosphere means that interpreting the data from them is challenging. Pristine samples collected from asteroids in space would be the ideal candidates, and successful sample ...

Pairing old and new technologies could unlock advances in plankton science

Pairing old and new technologies could unlock advances in plankton science
2025-01-29
Advances in technology – such as microscopic imaging and molecular techniques – have the potential to transform our understanding of global ocean health, according to the authors of a new study. However, they should not be employed at the expense of long-term plankton monitoring programmes, which continue to provide an essential role in tracking how our seas are shifting in the face of a changing global climate and are essential for informing routine assessments of marine biodiversity required by  ...

Pristine asteroid samples reveal secrets of the ancient solar system

2025-01-29
Curtin University researchers have gained an unprecedented glimpse into the early history of our solar system through some of the most well-preserved asteroid samples ever collected, potentially transforming our understanding of planetary formation and the origins of life. Experts from Curtin’s School of Earth and Planetary Sciences were selected to be amongst the first in the world to inspect samples collected during NASA’s seven-year, OSIRIS-REx mission to the ancient asteroid Bennu.   Asteroid Bennu is thought to be made of rubble fragments from a 4.5-billion-year-old parent body, containing materials that originated ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

A hearing aid for … your nose?

Borrowing nature’s blueprint: How scientists replicated bone marrow

Politically connected corporations received more exemptions from US tariffs on Chinese imports, study finds

Walk like a … gecko? Animal footpads inspire a polymer that sticks to ice

Role of barrier films in maintaining the stability of perovskite solar cells

New technology tracks dairy cows for improved health and productivity

Antibiotics of the future are prone to bacterial resistance

New ‘Matchless’ grass variety yields high seed count without need for field burning

Propranolol may reduce ischemic stroke risk in women with migraines

Stroke may increase risk of anxiety, depression and more in children

Eating a Mediterranean-style diet improved brain health in study of Hispanic/Latino adults

Blood test may detect stroke type before hospital arrival, allowing faster treatment

Changing therapy practice to add higher-intensity walking improves early stroke recovery

ECG tests may someday be used by AI model to detect premature aging and cognitive decline

Stroke warning sign acronyms drive 911 calls, F.A.S.T. leads in symptom recall for public

Regular dental flossing may lower risk of stroke from blood clots, irregular heartbeats

A common mouth and gut bacteria may be linked with increased stroke risk

Biomarker tied to premature cell aging may signal stroke, dementia, late-life depression

Australian researchers enhance next-generation gene-editing technologies for cancer and medical research

EMBARGOED MEDIA RELEASE: Zika uses human skin as ‘mosquito magnet’ to spread virus further

TU Delft develops 3D-printed brain-like environment that promotes neuron growth

E-mobility: TU Graz AI system accelerates the development of powertrains

Better digital memories with the help of noble gases

Smarter memory paves the way for EU independence in computer manufacturing

Future of UK peatlands under threat due to climate change

‘Sleep hygiene’: How FIFO workers can get a better night's sleep

AI-based pregnancy analysis discovers previously unknown warning signs for stillbirth and newborn complications

Antidepressants reduce anxiety, but long-term impact remains unclear

Childhood trauma strongly linked to mental health problems in Brazilian adolescents, new study finds

Researchers leverage large-scale data to uncover new insights into rare diseases and COVID-19

[Press-News.org] Most mental health crisis services did not increase following 988 crisis hotline launch
Strategies needed to boost availability of crisis services at mental health treatment facilities