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SAMHSA Grant Awards By State FY 2006
Discretionary Funds in Detail

Center for Mental Health Services (CMHS)
TENNESSEE


Grantee: Tennessee Dept of Mental Health Nashville, TN
Program: State Mental Health Data Infrastructure Grants SM56642
Congressional District: TN-04
FY 2006 Funding: $142,200
Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2007
This project will continue the State's effort to build infrastructure to collect data and report the remaining Mental Health Block Grant Uniform Reporting System Developmental Measures. Grant efforts will focus on (1) local provider training to improve data quality, (2) implementation of web-based technology using DS2K + data standards to collect, report, and improve accessibility of data, and (3) strengthening internal and external database linkages. Project outcomes will include consistent data definitions, timely capture of data, improved measure of service outcomes and client change, improved data quality, and enhanced ability to analyze and report on developmental measures such as school attendance, school performance, and involvement with the criminal justice system. The project outcomes will be evaluated based on the ability to produce the data required for URS and other desired reporting. The project will also be evaluated in terms of its ability to produce data that is useful to and is used by system stakeholders.
     
Grantee: Tennessee Dept of Mental Health Nashville, TN
Program: Child Mental Health Initiative SM57010
Congressional District: TN-04
FY 2006 Funding: $1,181,384
Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2011
Mule Town Family Network is a rural child mental health initiative for Maury County, Tennessee administered through the Department of Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities. Planned by state, county, local agencies, individuals, youth, and family members, this initiative formalizes the infrastructure to plan, implement, and evaluate wraparound services that respond to the needs of children and youth (birth to 21 years) with SED and their families. The Network creates strong linkages and timely access to collaborative, individualized, strengthsbased, child-centered, family-focused, integrated, culturally competent, and community-based, wraparound services according to the guiding principles and core values for systems of care. the initiative will ensure that children with SED and families access and receive services in a seamless system of care that is culturally sensitive and meets the needs and desires of families. Services will be provided in a care managed team approach that includes family involvement, family support, and confidentiality. A total of 440 children and youth with SED and their families will be enrolled during the duration of the 6-year project.
     
Grantee: Family & Children's Service Nashville, TN
Program: Post Traumatic Stress Disorder in Children SM56082
Congressional District: TN-05
FY 2006 Funding: $400,000
Project Period: 09/30/2003 - 09/29/2007
The Childhood Trauma Intervention Center (CTIC) is a partnership between Family & Children's Service and the Nashville Child Advocacy Center, two agencies with expertise and experience in responding to children who have experienced trauma. This Center will increase early identification, expand access, and improve effective intervention for highly vulnerable, traumatized children through unique collaborations with child welfare (child protective and foster care services), law enforcement (including domestic violence intervention) and public education (school student services and a family resource center). The key collaborating agencies of CTIC are the Davidson County Department of Children's Services, the Metropolitan Nashville Police Department, and the Metropolitan Nashville Public Schools.
     
Grantee: Tennessee Voices for Children, Inc. Nashville, TN
Program: CMHS Statewide Family Network Grants SM56367
Congressional District: TN-05
FY 2006 Funding: $70,000
Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2007
Tennessee voices for Children (TVC) proposes to increase the capacity of the Statewide Family Support Network. This network serves to strengthen coalitions between family members, youth, mental health professionals and policy makers to support comprehensive, least restrictive Systems of Care for children and youth with serious emotional disturbances, recognizing that families are the best and most effective agents for positive change.
     
Grantee: CENTERSTONE COMMUNITY MENTAL HLTH CNTRS Nashville, TN
Program: TCE-Meeting the Mental Health Needs of Older Adults SM56910
Congressional District: TN-05
FY 2006 Funding: $400,000
Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2008
Centerstone’s initiative, IMPACT Nashville, will build a solid foundation for delivering and sustaining mental health outreach, treatment, and prevention services for adults age 60+ in Davidson County. The project will collaborate with primary care physicians, implement the IMPACT model for late life depression, form a community workgroup, enhance an Electronic Medical Record system, and build stakeholder consensus to support/expand collaborative care. The manualized, evidence-based model, Improving Mood-Promoting Access to Collaborative Treatment for Late Life Depression (IMPACT), will be implemented within a primary care clinic. Together clinic and mental health staff will make up a Treatment Team and deliver services including: screenings: antidepressant medications and/or brief psychotherapy; medication management; consumer/family education; and intensive follow-up. To support infrastructure development, the project will establish an Advisory Council and a Community Workgroup comprising consumers, healthcare professionals, and others interested in or familiar with the target population’s needs. Combined, these groups, along with project healthcare and technical staff will ensure ongoing consumer project input, build community support, and establish stakeholder consensus, as well as sustained infrastructure for the maintenance and expansion of collaborative care. The project will also enhance and customize an electronic medical record system to address age specific issues and support the IMPACT model.
     
Grantee: Vanderbilt University Nashville, TN
Program: Campus Suicide SM57508
Congressional District: TN-05
FY 2006 Funding: $68,088
Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2008
The Vanderbilt University Suicide Awareness and Prevention Project (VUSAPP) proposes to improve identification of and response to suicidality and its antecedents within the Vanderbilt student population. The major goals of VUSAPP are to refine the current on-campus network of student services and to develop educational materials and programs for students, their families and campus personnel. The project aims to unite and marshal the existing expertise and knowhow on campus in order to develop training programs for students and campus personnel that will allow for a more effective response to students with mental or behavioral health problems. The VUSAPP program will develop educational materials and implement educational seminars to enhance the university community’s knowledge on such issues as identifying risk factors for suicide, decreasing high-risk activities, promoting help seeking behaviors and providing easy access to such services. Additionally, VUSAPP will create a local college- based hotline and/or linkage to the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline as part of the crisis response plan on campus. Community resources in the greater Nashville area that address suicide and mental health directly, the Jason Foundation, Tennessee Voices for Children (TVC) and the Tennessee Network for Suicide Prevention (TNSP), will assist with the development of trainings and the implementation of VUSAPP at large. The evaluation employs an open systems evaluation design (Cohen & Kibel, 1993), which facilitates "understanding the environment in which programs are implemented and tracking progress toward the achievement of specific program outcomes" (Julian, Jones & Deyo, 1995, p.334).
     
Grantee: Tennessee Dept of Mental Health Nashville, TN
Program: Youth Suicide Prevention & Early Intervention - Cooperative Agreement State-Sponsored SM57400
Congressional District: TN-05
FY 2006 Funding: $400,000
Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2008
The Tennessee Department of Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities’ Tennessee Lives Count (TLC) is a statewide early intervention/prevention project to reduce suicides/attempts for youth (ages 10-24). TLC includes extensive gatekeeper and lethality assessment training, needs assessment and policy recommendations, stigma reduction, university curricula enhancement, and a plan for sustainability. TLC targets youth at risk for suicide, such as those in State custody, juvenile justice facilities, alternative schools, special education programs, gay, lesbian, and bisexual youth, youth with disciplinary and/or truancy problems, and other high risk populations. Project outcomes will result in: 14,000 gatekeepers, including 200 university faculty and 1,000 students trained in Question, Persuade, and Refer (Q.P.R.) and lethality assessment, who will impact at least 180,000 high risk youth; State agency memorandum of understandings (MOU) mandating gatekeeper training; regional resource directories and materials developed and distributed; statewide Taskforce completion of a needs assessment with policy/legislative recommendations; at least 15 professional organizations and 5 State advisory boards/commissions educated; Youth Suicide Advisory Council involved throughout the project; development of a sustainability plan, and completion of three project evaluations, coordinated with National Evaluation.
     
Grantee: UNIVERSITY OF MEMPHIS Memphis, TN
Program: Campus Suicide SM57876
Congressional District: TN-09
FY 2006 Funding: $74,975
Project Period: 09/30/2006 - 09/29/2009
Grantee proposes to implement Memphis STEPS, a compreheisive and coordinated campus suicide prevention initiative. The program centers around 1. conducting an institutional assessment of campus needs, policies and resources regarding suicide, suicide prevention, and other mental/behavioral health concerns impacting students progress and success; 2. educating students, faculty, staff, and the broader university community about suicide, mental and behavioral health problems associated with suicide ase well as preventiona and intervention resources and services available within the university community to address these problems; 3. develop and implement training in the assessment, diagnosis, and treatment of individuals suffering with behavioral/mental health problems for various segments of the univ community, including students enrolled in helping professionals, such as clinical and counseling psychology; and 4. evaluating the efficacy of the various educational and training activities, programs and services that will be offered as part of this initiative, in promoting mental health and preventing suicide on the campus.
     

Center for Substance Abuse Prevention (CSAP)
TENNESSEE


Grantee: Johnson City Public Schools Johnson City, TN
Program: Drug Free Communities SP12323
Congressional District: TN-01
FY 2006 Funding: $99,970
Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2008
The grantee will: (1) Reduce substance abuse among youth and, over time, among adults by addressing the factors in a community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promoting the factors that minimize the risk of substance abuse and; (2) Establish and strengthen community anti-drug coalitions.
     
Grantee: Johnson County Safe Haven, Inc Mountain City, TN
Program: Drug Free Communities SP12980
Congressional District: TN-01
FY 2006 Funding: $100,000
Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2010
The grantee will: (1) reduce substance abuse among youth and over time, among adults by addressing factors in the community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promote factors to minimize the risk of substance abuse; (2) establish and strengthen citizen participation and collaboration among communities, nonprofit agencies, and federal, state, local, and tribal governments to support community efforts to deliver effective substance use prevention strategies for youth; (3) use the Strategic Prevention Framework of evidence based prevention strategies to assess needs, build capacity, plan, implement and evaluate community prevention initiatives; and (4) assess and report on the effectiveness of community prevention initiatives to reduce age of onset of any drug use, frequency of use in the past 30 days, increased perception of risk or harm, and increased perception of disapproval of use by peers and adults.
     
Grantee: State of Tennessee Nashville, TN
Program: Strategic Prevention Framework State Incentive Grants SP11214
Congressional District: TN-01
FY 2006 Funding: $2,350,965
Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2009
The Strategic Prevention Framework State Incentive Grants are used to advance community-based programs for substance abuse prevention, mental health promotion, and mental illness prevention. The SPF SIG implements a five-step process known to promote youth development, reduce risk-taking behaviors, build on assets, and prevent problem behaviors. The five steps are: (1) conduct needs assessments; (2) build state and local capacity; (3) develop a comprehensive strategic plan; (4) implement evidence-based prevention policies, programs and practices; and (5) monitor and evaluate program effectiveness, sustaining what has worked well. These grants will allow the programs to provide leadership, technical support and monitoring to ensure that participating communities are successful. The success of the grants will be measured by specific measurable outcomes, among them: abstinence from drug use and alcohol abuse, reduction in substance abuse-related crime, attainment of employment or enrollment in school, increased stability in family and living conditions, increased access to services, and increased social connectedness. Tennessee's Strategic Prevention Framework State Incentive Grant will use a data-based problem-solving within a systems change model and provide the framework and resources for state government and communities to partner effectively to target scarce resources and build capacity, making each more effective in their efforts to prevent substance use across the lifespan.
     
Grantee: Community House Cooperative, Inc. Newport, TN
Program: Drug Free Communities SP10806
Congressional District: TN-01
FY 2006 Funding: $100,000
Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2008
The grantee will: (1) reduce substance abuse among youth and over time, among adults by addressing factors in the community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promote factors to minimize the risk of substance abuse; (2) establish and strengthen citizen participation and collaboration among communities, nonprofit agencies, and federal, state, local, and tribal governments to support community efforts to deliver effective substance use prevention strategies for youth; (3) use the Strategic Prevention Framework of evidence based prevention strategies to assess needs, build capacity, plan, implement and evaluate community prevention initiatives; and (4) assess and report on the effectiveness of community prevention initiatives to reduce age of onset of any drug use, frequency of use in the past 30 days, increased perception of risk or harm, and increased perception of disapproval of use by peers and adults.
     
Grantee: Metropolitan Drug Commission Knoxville, TN
Program: Drug Free Communities Support Program - Mentoring SP13980
Congressional District: TN-02
FY 2006 Funding: $75,000
Project Period: 09/30/2006 - 09/29/2008
The grantee will: (1) support and encourage the development of new or the expansion of existing community anti-drug coalitions that are focused on the prevention and treatment of substance abuse; (2) assist one or more communities in efforts to begin coalition operations or to expand the operations of community coalitions that want to receive assistance.
     
Grantee: Metropolitan Drug Commission Knoxville, TN
Program: Drug Free Communities SP12074
Congressional District: TN-02
FY 2006 Funding: $100,000
Project Period: 09/30/2006 - 09/29/2011
The grantee will: (1) Reduce substance abuse among youth and, over time, among adults by addressing the factors in a community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promoting the factors that minimize the risk of substance abuse and; (2) Establish and strengthen community anti-drug coalitions.
     
Grantee: Loudon County Health Improvement Council Loudon, TN
Program: Drug Free Communities SP12896
Congressional District: TN-02
FY 2006 Funding: $99,609
Project Period: 10/01/2005 - 09/29/2010
The grantee will: (1) reduce substance abuse among youth and over time, among adults by addressing factors in the community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promote factors to minimize the risk of substance abuse; (2) establish and strengthen citizen participation and collaboration among communities, nonprofit agencies, and federal, state, local, and tribal governments to support community efforts to deliver effective substance use prevention strategies for youth; (3) use the Strategic Prevention Framework of evidence based prevention strategies to assess needs, build capacity, plan, implement and evaluate community prevention initiatives; and (4) assess and report on the effectiveness of community prevention initiatives to reduce age of onset of any drug use, frequency of use in the past 30 days, increased perception of risk or harm, and increased perception of disapproval of use by peers and adults.
     
Grantee: RIDGEVIEW PSYCHIATRIC HOSPITAL AND CTR Oak Ridge, TN
Program: Prevention of Methamphetamine Abuse SP14088
Congressional District: TN-03
FY 2006 Funding: $319,977
Project Period: 09/30/2006 - 09/29/2009
The METH P.I. PROGRAM will implement alternative school based prevention/intervention programs targeted at adolescents who are at high risk for methamphetamine use using the Project SUCCESS model with a program emphasis on the drug methamphetamine along with Adventure Based Counseling. This program will be supplemented with community educational activities and media campaigns related to the prevention of methamphetamine abuse and addiction. The project will be established n the Tennessee counties of Anderson, Roane, Morgan, Scott and Campbell and will serve 900 adolescents through the course of the grant life.
     
Grantee: CENTERSTONE COMMUNITY MENTAL HLTH CNTRS Nashville, TN
Program: Prevention of Methamphetamine Abuse SP14042
Congressional District: TN-05
FY 2006 Funding: $350,000
Project Period: 09/30/2006 - 09/29/2009
Centerstone's Methamphetamine Awareness and Prevention (MAP) is a culturally sensitive, community-based prevention program providing outreach/education to a total of 1,800 adults and youth and a total of 600 youth, ages 10-18, in ten rural counties in Middle Tennessee. In this rural Appalachian area, methamphetamine production, trafficking, and abuse is overburdening the criminal justice system, creating environmental hazards, and impacting the resources of local communities at a historically unparalleled rate, as well as endangering the health of individuals, children, and families.
     
Grantee: Alcohol & Drug Council of Middle Tenn Nashville, TN
Program: Drug Free Communities SP11439
Congressional District: TN-05
FY 2006 Funding: $99,977
Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2009
The grantee will: (1) Reduce substance abuse among youth and, over time, among adults by addressing the factors in a community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promoting the factors that minimize the risk of substance abuse and; (2) Establish and strengthen community anti-drug coalitions.
     
Grantee: Murfreesboro Housing Authority Murfreesboro, TN
Program: Drug Free Communities SP11609
Congressional District: TN-06
FY 2006 Funding: $100,000
Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2009
The grantee will: (1) Reduce substance abuse among youth and, over time, among adults by addressing the factors in a community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promoting the factors that minimize the risk of substance abuse and; (2) Establish and strengthen community anti-drug coalitions.
     
Grantee: Humphreys County Drug Alliance, Inc Waverly, TN
Program: Drug Free Communities SP12324
Congressional District: TN-08
FY 2006 Funding: $100,000
Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2008
The grantee will: (1) Reduce substance abuse among youth and, over time, among adults by addressing the factors in a community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promoting the factors that minimize the risk of substance abuse and; (2) Establish and strengthen community anti-drug coalitions.
     

Center for Substance Abuse Treatment (CSAT)
TENNESSEE


Grantee: State of Tennessee Nashville, TN
Program: Access to Recovery TI16832
Congressional District: TN-01
FY 2006 Funding: $5,866,013
Project Period: 08/03/2004 - 08/02/2007
The goal of the Tennessee program is to maintain abstinence by supplying vouchers for assessment, substance abuse clinical treatment and/or recovery services. The program will provide client choice among substance abuse clinical treatment and recovery support providers while expanding access to service options, including faith-based options, and increasing the number of state-authorized substance abuse providers.
     
Grantee: University of Tennessee Knoxville, TN
Program: TCE- Campus Screening/Colleges & Universities TI17175
Congressional District: TN-02
FY 2006 Funding: $377,110
Project Period: 07/01/2005 - 06/30/2008
The proposed program, representing a collaborative effort between the College of Social Work, the University Chancellor's Office, and university and community substance abuse service providers, is intended to enhance and expand treatment services to undergraduate students in Knoxville at risk for the consequences of substance use and abuse. This unique collaboration provides a computer-based screening and intervention program based on the BASICS (Brief Alcohol Screening and Intervention for College Students) alcohol treatment intervention for college students developed by Dimetr, Baer, Kivlahan, & Marlatt (1999).
     
Grantee: RIDGEVIEW PSYCHIATRIC HOSPITAL AND CTR Oak Ridge, TN
Program: Treatment for Homeless - Homeless TI18153
Congressional District: TN-03
FY 2006 Funding: $400,000
Project Period: 09/30/2006 - 09/29/2011
The project plans to address a significant treatment void of the Appalachian homeless rural population with co-occurring disorders by implementing individualized, community-based, integrated treatment services linked with a seamless referral system to housing and employment programs and other needed physical and social services. The MATCH program will incorporate components from the CMHS evidence based practices of the ACT model, Integrated Treatment Model, Supportive Employment model, and the Psycho-education model to provide an effective, encompassing treatment program.
     
Grantee: Tennessee Dept of Mental Hlth & Dev Dis Nashville, TN
Program: TCE Rural Populations TI16356
Congressional District: TN-04
FY 2006 Funding: $500,000
Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2007
The grant supports targeted outreach to older adults who are abusing alcohol or other drugs including prescription and over-the-counter medication. Outpatient culturally sensitive care services will be provided for 260 persons.
     
Grantee: Tennessee Dept of Mental Health Nashville, TN
Program: TCE Rural Populations TI17232
Congressional District: TN-04
FY 2006 Funding: $500,000
Project Period: 08/15/2005 - 08/14/2008
Tennessee's Targeted Capacity Expansion project, "Methamphetamine Evidence-based Treatment & Healing" (METH), targets adults ages 18+ who are abusing methamphetamine and other emerging drugs in six rural counties. Utilizing the Matrix Model, support services (outreach, assessment, case management), and community education, the Rural METH Initiative will expand access to structured, culturally competent care for 180 persons over the 3 year grant program. Forty (40) clients will be served in year 1, sixty (60) clients will be served in year 2 and eighty (80) clients will be served in year 3. The target population is anticipated to reflect the general county demographics and will be socio-economically diverse, white males and females between 20 and 29 years of age with a higher percentage of women using stimulants. Hispanics and African Americans will also be served by this program.
     
Grantee: Meharry Medical College Nashville, TN
Program: Targeted Capacity - HIV/AIDS TI15862
Congressional District: TN-05
FY 2006 Funding: $492,903
Project Period: 09/30/2003 - 09/29/2008
The Treatment Access Project for African American Women is designed to expand substance abuse treatment and outreach capacity, and enhance treatment services to serve African American women living in Nashville minority communities who are infected or affected by HIV/AIDS.
     
Grantee: CENTERSTONE COMMUNITY MENTAL HLTH CNTRS Nashville, TN
Program: Homeless Addictions Treatment TI16562
Congressional District: TN-05
FY 2006 Funding: $400,000
Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2009
This program will provide integrated mental health and substance abuse services through adoption of an ACT team co-located in a shelter for adults with substance abuse and/or mental health disorders.
     
Grantee: State of Tennessee Nashville, TN
Program: State Adolescent Substance Abuse Treatment Coordination TI17374
Congressional District: TN-05
FY 2006 Funding: $400,000
Project Period: 08/01/2005 - 07/31/2008
The Governor’s Office of Children’s Care Coordination proposes the Tennessee Adolescent Coordination of Treatment (T-ACT) to promote accessible, high quality, effective services to adolescents with substance abuse problems and their families. Both prevention and treatment services will be of concern, since they are so closely related. To accomplish this, T-ACT proposes the following goals/coordinating strategies: - To develop full-time staff position(s) in the Governor’s Office of Children’s Care Coordination to lead the project; - To include a broad range of stakeholders in coordination and other activities, including State agencies, providers, advocacy groups, family members, youth, and the other community members who support them (e.g., teachers, clergy, physicians); - To conduct needs assessment to inform strategic planning and policy development; - To coordinate existing resources and activities of State agencies, service providers, provider associations, community agencies, and advocacy groups across the State; - To enhance statewide training, technical assistance, and information dissemination, with a focus on adolescent substance abuse issues and evidence-based practice; - To establish a set of performance indicators to monitor system functioning; and - To provide information on Federal Government and foundation resources available to enhance training, technical assistance, service delivery, and other related activities.
     
Grantee: CENTERSTONE COMMUNITY MENTAL HLTH CNTRS Nashville, TN
Program: Effective Adolescent Treatment TI17755
Congressional District: TN-05
FY 2006 Funding: $300,000
Project Period: 09/30/2006 - 09/29/2009
Centerstone's Students Experiencing Life Free (Project SELF) is a culturally sensitive, community-based treatment program serving a total of 144 adolescents, ages 12-18, with SUD and/or co-occuring mental disorders, and their families in rural Maury County, Tennessee. Ensuring access through local schools and courts, the project utilizes the Adolescent Community Reinforcement Approach (ACRA) and the Assertive Continuing Care (ACC) models. Within these models, each adolescent participates in a range of intensive outpatient services over a period of 6 months (ACRA for 3 months, followed by ACC for 3 months), and family/caregivers participate in joint and individual sessions. Enrollees receive therapy, case management, a minimum of 5 urine screens, as well as referral, advocacy and other services imperative to recovery. Project staff will conduct therapy and case management within school, home, and community-based settings. These services will be complemented by community outreach and education efforts. Project SELF will collobate closely with the local school system, juvenile courts, and the recently funded SAMHSA/CMHS system of care grant (serving children, adolescents, and young adults, ages birth to 21 years) in Maury County. This SOC grant, received by the Tennessee Department of Mental Health and Development Disabilities (TDMHDD) entitled "Mule Town Family Network", was instrumental in identifying the specific gap in services for adolescents with SUD and their families. To enhance coordination and collaboration, the Advisory Council for Project SELF will be representative of youth, families, adults, and agencies within the county and will serve as a sub-committee of the SOC network.
     
Grantee: Foundations Associates Memphis, TN
Program: Targeted Capacity - HIV/AIDS TI15791
Congressional District: TN-07
FY 2006 Funding: $500,000
Project Period: 09/30/2003 - 09/29/2008
The project represents synergies among lead Memphis providers in the co-occurrence and HIV/AIDS community to address the city's greatest infrastructure gap-treatment for ex-offenders with complex co-occurring SA/MI and seropositive or high risk status. It integrates evidence based practices of NIDA, Drake, CDC, & SAMHSA for SA/MI treatment and HIV/AIDS prevention/care to deliver a comprehensive, integrated recovery management model.
     
Grantee: Foundation Associates Memphis, TN
Program: Homeless Addictions Treatment TI16485
Congressional District: TN-07
FY 2006 Funding: $399,386
Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2009
This program will provide culturally competent, integrated Assertive Community Treatment (ACT) for homeless persons with co-occurring disorders.
     


Last Update: 9/24/2008