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$2.9M awarded to treat behavior after disaster

The Ohio Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services was awarded nearly $2.9 million in federal funding from the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act, Gov. Mike DeWine has announced.

This money will help state officials meet the behavioral health needs of citizens affected by traumatic events such as natural disasters, mass shootings, and other large-scale manmade and terrorist events.

“The recent train derailment in East Palestine is a prime example of how disasters can impact the well-being of individuals, families, and communities,” said DeWine. “It is essential that our behavioral health care system is able to quickly respond to the immediate and long-term behavioral health care needs of those adversely affected by trauma. These funds will accomplish just that by strengthening Ohio’s emergency preparedness planning and ensuring a swift, coordinated response when surges in behavioral health needs inevitably occur.”

This additional federal funding comes nearly a week after OhioMHAS was awarded a $209,402 federal Supplemental Emergency Response grant from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration to help meet the immediate and ongoing behavioral health needs of the East Palestine community.

VARIETY OF REACTIONS

When people experience a disaster, either natural or manmade, they may experience a variety of reactions, many of which are natural responses to difficult situations. Most people show the ability to bounce back, cope with adversity, and endure during difficult situations. It is also common and expected, however, for people to show signs of stress after exposure to a disaster — making it important to monitor the physical and emotional health of those affected as well as those responding to the needs of others.

OhioMHAS will use the funding to help establish statewide and local partnerships, policies, procedures and protocols that create the changes necessary to deploy essential behavioral health supports and resources immediately to every community across the state after tragedies, officials said.

Plans include development and enhancement of multidisciplinary mobile crisis teams that can be deployed rapidly 24/7 anywhere in the state for crisis support.

“Preparing for, responding to, and recovering from disasters and traumatic events is essential to the behavioral health of individuals and communities alike,” said OhioMHAS Director Lori Criss. “Although everyone reacts differently to disasters and most will return to normal, some of those affected may suffer from serious and prolonged mental or emotional distress. Finding support in a timely fashion will help people minimize negative outcomes.”

KEY OBJECTIVES

OhioMHAS already has developed a Behavioral Health Emergency and Disaster Planning– Preparedness and Resource Manual. Key objectives include:

∫ Creating a statewide oversight structure via the Ohio Mental Health Emergency Preparedness Team

∫ Establishing and / or enhancing the work of regional disaster preparedness teams

∫ Conducting a statewide gap analysis

∫ Optimizing Ohio’s 988 system

∫ Improving interagency coordination

∫ Enhancing response to school violence and mass shootings

∫ Increasing training and post-trauma treatment for first responders

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