The Poweshiek County Mental Health Center has
announced it will cease operation on Saturday, April 13, 2013, after more
than 40 years of providing mental health services to county residents.
“The Poweshiek County Mental Health Center has been
struggling with the economics of operating a rural mental health center for
many years,” says Doug Cameron, volunteer board president of the Poweshiek
County Mental Health Center. “The shortage of providers in the county combined
with poor reimbursement have stressed the local services to a point where we
are faced with no choice but to close the center.”
Poweshiek County Mental Health Center clients will be able
to receive mental health services locally with the announcement by Grinnell
Regional Medical Center to offer a new program. Grinnell Regional Mental Health
will begin providing medication management services on April 1 and counseling
services on Monday, April 15, on the second floor of the Ahrens Medical Arts
Center.
Laura Van Cleve, DO, psychiatrist, will serve as the
program’s medical director. GRMC will hire a nurse practitioner, a registered
nurse, therapists, and other mental health staff to care for clients. Janne
Johnson, ARNP, of Seasons Center for Behavioral Health in Spirit Lake, will
continue providing telepsychiatry via video conferencing. Joel Rand, PA-C, will
continue to assist with medication management on a temporary basis until new
practitioners are hired. Appointments
may be made by calling 641-236-2347.
"GRMC has been providing psychiatric medication management
for clients of the Poweshiek County Mental Health Center since February 4 to
fill a void at the mental health center,” says Suzanne Cooner, GRMC
vice-president of operations. “Our family practitioners, Dr. Patrick Cogley and
Joel Rand, stepped in quickly to help. We could not have managed without them.
Our primary concern has been, and will continue to be, providing quality
healthcare for area residents. We continue to read daily about the serious
shortage of mental health providers and funding for services. Iowa ranks 47th out of 50 states for
psychiatrists per capita and 46th in per capita for number of psychologists. We
will face this challenge until state and federal funding and policy changes.”
GRMC opted to start its own program after the mental health
board indicated it would not remain open due to financial difficulties.
”GRMC is working with the mental health staff to assist
clients and allow them to receive the care they need,” Cameron says. “We are
also working on a solution to partner with another organization that can
sustain the Station Club House. Larger organizations have the efficiencies in
billing, human resources, and other administrative functions to reduce
operational costs in running a clinic.”
”I want to commend the mental health staff
for their efforts over the past four years to make the community mental health
center work. They all made personal sacrifices with the hopes to pull through
the difficult financial times,” Cameron says. “Marilyn Kennett, past board
president, worked very hard and creatively to pull together resources. The center
just didn’t have the money to continue.”
”Though the board had received generous support from the
community to raise some funds, Iowa and Poweshiek County are funded at such a
low level that an independent program just can’t sustain itself any longer,”
Cameron says.
Dawn Roth, the Poweshiek County Community Services
Administrator – Central Point of Coordination administrator, added that her
organization will help with a smooth transition for current clients of the
Poweshiek County Mental Health Center to the new Grinnell Regional Mental
Health. The CPC provides funding for low income individual.
”It is imperative that everyone work together in this
transition,” Roth says. “We’ll work with the hospital to fund services for the
uninsured in the county. We provide funding assistance for approximately 150
residents in Poweshiek County. My role is to assist these individuals to get
the services, resources and treatments needed. There is a definite shortage of
providers and resources so we appreciate that the hospital will begin its
program.”
Cooner assures the community that “we are all doing all we
can as quickly as possible to ensure that individuals with mental health issues
do not go untreated. Providing high
quality and sustainable mental health services to serve the residents of our
community is our first priority.”
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