The Mental Hygiene Administration originated in 1886 as the State Lunacy Commission (Chapter 487, Acts of 1886). The Commission inspected public and private institutions for the insane and advised their boards of managers. In 1922, the Commission was replaced by the Board of Mental Hygiene (Chapter 29, Acts of 1922). The Board, in turn, was superseded by the Department of Mental Hygiene in 1949 (Chapter 685, Acts of 1949). Not only was the Board of Mental Hygiene abolished in 1949, but so also were the separate governing boards of the State mental hospitals. In that year, the Department of Mental Hygiene became responsible for the custody, care, and treatment of mentally ill persons. The Department of Mental Hygiene became part of the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene in 1969 and subsequently reorganized as the Mental Hygiene Administration (Chapter 77, Acts of 1969). In July 2008, the Administration moved under the Deputy Secretary for Behavioral Health and Disabilities (Chapter 661, Acts of 2008).
The Administration oversees the Public Mental Health System by planning, setting policy, and allocating resources. To ensure that Marylanders receive appropriate treatment, the Administration provides mental health services in the community through core service agencies, and through State institutions (Code Health - General Article, secs. 10-201 through 10-208).
Core Service Agencies. Under authority of the Secretary of Health and Mental Hygiene, a core service agency is designated by each county government to plan, manage, and monitor the delivery of publicly funded mental health services in the county (Code Health-General Article, secs. 10-1201 through 10-1203).
State Institutions. Under the Mental Hygiene Administration are five psychiatric hospitals:
The Administration also is responsible for two residential treatment centers for youth:
Mental Health Crisis Response System. Within the Mental Hygiene Administration, the Maryland Mental Health Crisis Response System formed in October 2002 (Chapter 371, Acts of 2002). The Administration consults with family members, and consumers and advocates of mental health services to develop a statewide network to respond to the current mental health crisis. To reduce threatening situations involving those needing mental health services, the network provides assistance to prevent suicides, homicides, arrests, and unnecessary hospitalizations. This assistance includes a hotline for suicide prevention, treatment referrals, telephone assistance for mental information, and even transportation of patients to emergency appointments. The network coordinates its work with core service agencies (local health departments), police, emergency medical personnel, and mental health providers.
The Director of Mental Hygiene heads the Administration. Certified in psychiatry by the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology, the Director is appointed by the Secretary of Health and Mental Hygiene. With the approval of the Secretary of Health and Mental Hygiene, the Director of Mental Hygiene is empowered to make State grants-in-aid to further community mental health services (Chapter 125, Acts of 1966). The Director supervises programs receiving these grants-in-aid (Code Health - General Article, secs. 10-101 through 10-1203). Local mental health advisory committees also are authorized for each county and Baltimore City (Code Health - General Article, secs. 10-308 through 10-312).
The Council's eighteen members are appointed by the Governor for three-year terms (Code Health - General Article, secs. 10-301 through 10-305).
MENTAL HEALTH TRANSFORMATION WORKING GROUP
Eastern Shore Hospital Center began in 1912 as Eastern Shore State Hospital (Chapter 187, Acts of 1912). Built on the banks of the Choptank River, the Hospital admitted its first patients in 1915. In 1973, it was renamed Eastern Shore Hospital Center (Chapter 740, Acts of 1973). In August 2001, the original hospital was replaced by a new 80-bed facility in Cambridge.
The Center provides comprehensive psychiatric care for patients with mental illness who reside on the lower Eastern Shore. The facility is licensed for a daily capacity of 76 patients (Code Health - General Article, sec. 10-406).
Opened in October 1978, the Thomas B. Finan Hospital Center is a multi-purpose psychiatric facility which serves Allegany, Frederick, Garrett and Washington county residents of all ages with mental illnesses (Code Health - General Article, sec. 10-406). Services extend as well to youth from Carroll, Howard and Montgomery counties.
Thomas B. Finan Hospital Center, 10102 Country Club Road, Cumberland, Maryland, July 2006. Photo by Diane F. Evartt.
The Clifton T. Perkins Hospital Center is the State's only maximum security hospital. Formally established in 1959 as Maximum Security Hospital, it was placed under the Department of Mental Hygiene. In April 1960, the Hospital was renamed to honor Dr. Clifton T. Perkins, Commissioner of Mental Hygiene from 1950 to 1959 (Chapter 814, Acts of 1959). Dr. Perkins had planned and defined the function of the Hospital but died before it opened early in 1960. In 1973, the Hospital became the Clifton T. Perkins Hospital Center (Chapter 740, Acts of 1973).
Patients referred by the courts of Maryland for pretrial psychiatric evaluation are treated by the Center. It is a residence for individual offenders who have been found not guilty by reason of insanity. The Center also serves as a hospital for prisoners who become mentally ill and require involuntary psychiatric hospitalization. Prisoners are committed to the Center for an indefinite length of time and only can be released upon the authorization of a judge. From other State psychiatric hospitals, the Center also accepts patients whose illness requires maximum security treatment for a period of time. The Center is funded to serve a daily average of 250 patients (Code Health - General Article, sec. 10-406).
Bland Bryant Building, Spring Grove Hospital Center, Catonsville, Maryland, April 2003. Photo by Diane F. Evartt.
Foster Wade Building, Spring Grove Hospital Center, Catonsville, Maryland, April 2003. Photo by Diane F. Evartt.
Springfield Hospital Center formed in 1894 as the Second Hospital for the Insane of the State of Maryland (Chapter 231, Acts of 1894). The Hospital opened for patients in 1896. It was renamed Springfield State Hospital in 1900 (Chapter 70, Acts of 1900), and Springfield Hospital Center in 1973 (Chapter 740, Acts of 1973).
Springfield Hospital Center, Sykesville, Maryland, August 2006. Photo by Diane F. Evartt.
REGIONAL INSTITUTE FOR CHILDREN & ADOLESCENTS - BALTIMORE
In 1958, the Regional Institute for Children and Adolescents - Baltimore opened. Formerly on the grounds of Rosewood State Hospital in Baltimore County, the Institute moved to southwest Baltimore, near the U.S. National Cemetery, in the early 1970s.
The Institute provides intensive inpatient and outpatient psychiatric care and educational services for youths between ages 12 to 18 with serious emotional illnesses. It serves adolescents from Baltimore City and Anne Arundel and Baltimore counties. Licensed to treat up to 45 inpatients, the Institute in Fiscal Year 2011 served a daily average of 37 residential patients and 55 outpatients.
JOHN L. GILDNER REGIONAL INSTITUTE FOR CHILDREN & ADOLESCENTS - ROCKVILLE
In 1980, the Regional Institute for Children and Adolescents - Rockville received its first patients. On May 9, 2001, the Institute was renamed for its founding chief executive officer, John L. Gildner, who died in November 1999.
The Institute provides treatment and education services to children and adolescents aged 10 to 18 years with severe emotional disabilities. Serving youth from Carroll, Frederick, Howard, Montgomery, Prince George's and Washington counties, it offers an intensive diagnostic and treatment unit, and residential and day treatment. Educational services are provided by the Montgomery County Department of Education.
The Institute is funded to serve an average daily population of 80 young people in residence and 100 children between the ages of 5 and 18 in day treatment.
Certain functions of Maryland's sex offender registration for persons within its jurisdiction are administered by Forensic Services which conducts pre-sentence mental health assessments of those convicted of sexual abuse of a minor.
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MARYLAND ADVISORY COUNCIL ON MENTAL HYGIENE
In 1976, the Maryland Advisory Council on Mental Hygiene was created (Chapter 746, Acts of 1976). It advises the Mental Hygiene Administration on the social, economic and medical problems of mental hygiene; and the provision of services to citizens with mental illness. The Council works with the Administration to plan and operate the Public Mental Health System.
In 2005, the Secretary of Health and Mental Hygiene and the Secretary of Disabilities convened the Mental Health Transformation Working Group. For the State Incentive Grant, the Working Group is to conduct a thorough needs assessment and resource inventory of State agencies and develop a comprehensive mental health plan.
EASTERN SHORE HOSPITAL CENTER
P. O. Box 800
Route 50, Cambridge, MD 21613 - 0800
CITIZENS ADVISORY BOARD
The Governor appoints the Board's eleven members to four-year terms upon recommendation of the Secretary of Health and Mental Hygiene.
THOMAS B. FINAN HOSPITAL CENTER
P. O. Box 1722
10102 Country Club Road, Cumberland, MD 21502 - 1722
The Center is staffed to accommodate and treat 72 adult and 24 geriatric patients, and 23 adolescents in small, 25-bed cottages. It also includes three cottages that house treatment programs for addicts. These are operated by the Allegany County Health Department. The one-cottage Massie Unit, licensed by the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene to the County Health Department, treats adults who abuse drugs and alcohol. The two-cottage Jackson Unit, licensed by the Department of Juvenile Justice to the County Health Department, treats juveniles with substance abuse problems or children in need of supervision. Another cottage is leased to Archway Station, Inc., as a 16-bed rehabilitation apartment complex. Also on the grounds of the Finan Center, the Joseph D. Brandenburg Center serves persons with mental retardation through programs of the Developmental Disabilities Administration.
CITIZENS ADVISORY BOARD
Upon recommendation of the Secretary of Health and Mental Hygiene, the Governor appoints the Board's seven members to four-year terms.CLIFTON T. PERKINS HOSPITAL CENTER
P. O. Box 1000
8450 Dorsey Run, Jessup, MD 20794 - 1000
CITIZENS ADVISORY BOARD
The Board's seven members are appointed to four-year terms by the Governor upon recommendation of the Secretary of Health and Mental Hygiene.SPRING GROVE HOSPITAL CENTER
Wade Ave., Catonsville, MD 21228
Spring Grove Hospital Center is the oldest hospital for the mentally ill in Maryland, and the third oldest in the United States. It was established in 1797 in Baltimore at Monument Street and Broadway, the site where the Johns Hopkins Hospital later would be constructed (Chapter 102, Acts of 1797). First authorized as a "common State hospital" (the first public hospital in Maryland), it originally came under the auspices of the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, and was run by private physicians. In 1834, however, the State assumed its control and called it the Maryland Hospital. It was renamed the Maryland Hospital for the Insane in 1838, and moved to its present site at Catonsville in 1872. Renamed Spring Grove State Hospital in 1912 (Chapter 187, Acts of 1912), it became Spring Grove Hospital Center in 1973 (Chapter 740, Acts of 1973).
With 295 inpatient beds and 62 assisted-living beds, the Center provides acute, subacute and long-term psychiatric care to adult and geriatric patients from Baltimore City, and Baltimore and Harford counties. For those jurisdictions, the Center also conducts evaluations to determine competency to stand trial and criminal responsibility (Code Health - General Article, sec. 10-406).
CITIZENS ADVISORY BOARD
The Board's nine members are appointed to four-year terms by the Governor upon recommendation of the Secretary of Health and Mental Hygiene (Code Health - General Article, sec. 10-411).
SPRINGFIELD HOSPITAL CENTER
6655 Sykesville Road, Sykesville, MD 21784
A regional psychiatric facility, the Center admits patients from northern Baltimore City and Carroll, Howard and Montgomery counties, as well as mentally ill deaf patients statewide. The Center is the largest State facility for the care of persons with mental illness, with a licensed capacity of 522 beds. (Code Health - General Article, sec. 10-406).
CITIZENS ADVISORY BOARD
The Governor, upon recommendation of the Secretary of Health and Mental Hygiene, appoints the seven members of the Board to four-year terms.OFFICE OF ADULT SERVICES
For adults and seniors, Adult Services develops, oversees, and monitors community-based mental health programs and services. It also designs and develops specialized programs and services for youth transitioning into adulthood; seniors continuing to live in their own homes; individuals in State hospitals; and adults who have sustained a traumatic brain injury.
OFFICE OF CHILD & ADOLESCENT SERVICES
Child and Adolescent Services formed in 1984 to oversee and coordinated mental health services for children and adolescents within the Public Mental Health System. It also is responsible for two residential treatment centers for youth: the Regional Institutes for Children and Adolescents in Baltimore and Rockville.
605 South Chapel Gate Lane, Baltimore, MD 21229
CITIZENS ADVISORY BOARD
Upon recommendation of the Secretary of Health and Mental Hygiene, the Governor appoints the Board's seven members to four-year terms.
15000 Broschart Road, Rockville, MD 20850
CITIZENS ADVISORY BOARD
The seven-member Board is appointed to four-year terms by the Governor upon recommendation of the Secretary of Health and Mental Hygiene.OFFICE OF FORENSIC SERVICES
Within the Mental Hygiene Administration, Forensic Services is responsible for mental health services that may be court-ordered, such as pre-sentence psychiatric evaluations and competency screenings; and for evaluation and treatment of individuals to determine competency to stand trial or criminal responsibility. Forensic Services also monitors individuals found not criminally responsible for their crimes who are released conditionally into the community.
OFFICE OF PLANNING, EVALUATION, & TRAINING
The Office of Planning, Evaluation, and Training develops and oversees implementation of the Administration's annual plans for mental health services. It also prepares federal grant applications, monitors quality improvement surveys and systems, and develops and monitors training programs for the Public Mental Health System.
OFFICE OF SPECIAL NEEDS POPULATIONS
In 1991, the Mental Hygiene Administration established the Office of Special Needs Populations to oversee certain federal grants which addressed the mental health needs of certain populations. The Office became responsible for planning, coordinating, and monitoring mental health services for individuals who are incarcerated, homeless, deaf or hard of hearing, victims of natural or man-made disasters, or have co-occurring mental disorders and substance abuse issues. Later, the Office began to provide services to veterans from the Afghanistan and Iraq wars who have behavioral health needs.
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