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Prisma Health-Upstate Foundation launches transformative OneDay Campaign

November 22, 2024 by Prisma Health Media Relations

Originally published by Prisma Health Public Relations

GREENVILLE, SC—Prisma Health-Upstate Foundation this week launched its OneDay Campaign, an innovative initiative that will galvanize the community by bringing together individuals, businesses, other non-profits and community leaders to create change through philanthropy, unique engagement opportunities and community-oriented events.

Its goal is to inspire individuals and families to transform their “one-day” goals into “won day” achievements by connecting them with life-changing health services and programs offered by Prisma Health, helping to improve the overall health of those living in the Upstate.

Each year, the OneDay Campaign will raise funds for a different project or program within Prisma. This year’s debut OneDay Campaign will raise funds for the construction of the new 112-bed behavioral health hospital in Pickens County, set to break ground in 2025 and open in 2027.

“Every day, I see the impact mental health challenges have on individuals and families in our community,” said Karen Lommel, DO, Prisma’s inaugural Robert A. Jolley Jr. Endowed Chair of Psychiatry and Community Health.  “With more than one in five people in the Upstate struggling with behavioral health issues, the need for expanded resources is urgent. By supporting the OneDay Campaign, you are helping to make this critical expansion of care a reality.” 

Rion Smith, board chair of the Prisma Health-Upstate Foundation, emphasized the importance of community involvement. “Every gift, every moment and every event as part of the OneDay Campaign makes a difference. Together, we’re not just building a hospital — we’re building hope for families and individuals across the region.”

“We’re thrilled to introduce our OneDay Campaign as an opportunity for us to dream bigger and achieve more,” said Risé Wilson, chief philanthropy officer at Prisma Health and executive director of the Prisma Health-Upstate Foundation. “Through this campaign, we will address today’s critical health needs and also lay the groundwork for a healthier future for the entire Upstate.”

For more information on the OneDay Campaign and upcoming events, visit OneDayGVL.org. 

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Filed Under: Behavioral Health, OneDay, Prisma Health News, Upstate Foundation Tagged With: behavioralhealth, hospital, mental, mentalhealth, one day, oneday, onedaygvl, won day

Prisma Health plans to build $138 million inpatient behavioral health hospital in the Upstate with $100M in state funds

November 7, 2024 by Prisma Health Media Relations

Originally published by Prisma Health Public Relations

Project part of effort to improve behavioral health care statewide

GREENVILLE, SC—Prisma Health plans to build a new $138 million inpatient behavioral health hospital in the Upstate that will take a significant step forward in addressing the region’s growing need for enhanced access to cutting-edge behavioral health services. Prisma hopes to begin site work in spring 2025, pending Certificate of Need approval. Construction is expected to take approximately two years.

The hospital will be supported with $100 million in state funds appropriated to the S.C. Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) by the state’s General Assembly. The three-story behavioral health hospital is slated to be built on 46 acres at the corner of U.S. 123 and S.C. 153 in Pickens County. The 132,430-square-foot facility will be licensed for 112 beds that will replace Prisma Health’s 65-bed Marshall I. Pickens Psychiatric hospital (MIPH) located on the Greenville Memorial Hospital campus. As the only inpatient behavioral health facility in the Upstate to treat children, Prisma will quadruple the number of child and adolescent beds from 10 to 40 with the remaining 72 beds licensed for adults. This new facility will significantly improve the patient experience with current best-practice designs that provide a more healing, nurturing environment.

“South Carolina is no stranger to the behavioral health crisis sweeping our nation, and the inpatient and outpatient services in our state to support our citizens are woefully insufficient,” said S.C. Governor Henry McMaster. “This project is an important step forward in addressing the statewide need for an expansion of behavioral health services whenever and wherever possible.”
Prisma is completing its architectural and construction documents for the facility and has applied to the State for a Certificate of Need which is required to commence construction.

“This project is a powerful example of what we can accomplish through public-private partnerships and is a significant and much-needed step forward for our communities and state,” said Mark O’Halla, President and CEO of Prisma Health. “By doubling our inpatient capacity and creating a state-of-the-art, healing-centered facility, Prisma is bringing essential behavioral health services closer to home. As a safety-net provider, Prisma Health is committed to caring for all patients, regardless of their ability to pay, which means operating the facility with an annual financial loss. This project is only possible due to the state’s investment, which enables us to meet the growing need for behavioral health care in our communities. We are honored to partner with the South Carolina Department of Health and Human Services to address the critical need for compassionate, leading-edge behavioral health care in South Carolina, and extend our heartfelt thanks to Governor McMaster and our state leaders for making such a meaningful investment in the future of behavioral health in South Carolina.”

The hospital will offer specialized care for children, adolescents, adults, older adults and those adult patients requiring more intensive care. Each patient care unit will include a combination of private and semi-private rooms.

“The construction of a new inpatient behavioral health facility is a continuation of our commitment to providing these essential services statewide,” said S.C. Speaker Murrell Smith, who represents Sumter. “The increase in space and services will help to fill the gap in available behavioral health services across South Carolina and will alleviate the stress on local and law enforcement resources that not having access to this care creates. Prisma has been an excellent partner in this endeavor, taking on a significant amount of the cost to operate and construct this facility. This type of public-private partnership is how South Carolina will continue to close the gap in behavioral health care.”

The pivotal $100 million state funding will be with one-time, non-recurring dollars and is intended to grow psychiatric inpatient and outpatient services that result in additional mental health care capacity for the state. The most recent State Health Plan showed a need for 211 additional inpatient behavioral health beds statewide.

The Upstate population has been growing and so are the needs of patients in mental health crisis requiring inpatient psychiatric care. The number of patients admitted for psychiatric treatment has been steadily increasing over the past six years in the Upstate, with Pickens, Oconee and Greenville counties’ combined inpatient psychiatric admission rates jumping by nearly 50%.
MIPH, which opened in 1969, has extremely limited capacity and can only serve about 1,500 patients per year. That means that each year approximately 1,200 patients who come to Upstate Prisma emergency departments needing inpatient psychiatric care must instead be transported to facilities as far as the coast.

Access to inpatient care for children can be especially challenging, with one in five U.S. children having a mental, emotional or behavioral disorder in a given year, according to the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry. MIPH, which currently is licensed for only 10 beds for children and adolescents, is the only hospital in the Upstate that admits psychiatric patients aged 12 or younger. Many children are referred to other facilities in Columbia and Charleston, creating additional challenges for patients and their families. This new facility, which will be licensed for 40 child and adolescent beds, will bring services closer to home for patients in the Upstate, facilitating care and family involvement.

“This new facility will enable our exceptional team to provide leading-edge care to our patients in an environment the patients deserve,” said Dr. Karen Lommel, the Robert A. Jolley Jr. Endowed Chair of Psychiatry and Community Health for Prisma Health in the Upstate. “Patients experiencing a mental health crisis deserve expert compassionate care in a healing, nurturing environment. Our new hospital will significantly increase access to this vitally needed care but will also keep families closer to home and their family-friend networks which can itself help in recovery.”

Rep. Bruce Bannister – Greenville County, who is chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, said, “This project and the expansion of behavioral health services in the Greenville and Upstate community is long overdue. The Prisma Health Marshall I. Pickens Psychiatric Hospital has served Greenville and Upstate families well for decades, and I am thrilled this public-private partnership will not only expand these services but expand access in the modern environment our community deserves.”

Sen. Thomas Alexander, who is president of the state Senate, added, “Prisma Health’s leadership is a shining example of a public-private partnership dedicated to addressing the critical behavioral health needs facing our Upstate region and South Carolina. I am grateful for this partnership that is a vital step forward in increasing access to cutting-edge behavioral health services in our communities.”

But additional beds are just part of the solution.

Over the past six years in the Upstate, Prisma has quadrupled its number of psychiatrists, advanced practice clinicians and physician trainees (resident and fellow physicians) to increase access to mental health services. It began a child and adolescent psychiatry fellowship program in 2019 as well as a second adult psychiatry residency program in Greer in 2020 to help create a local training pipeline and ease the growing national shortage. The system has also partnered with community groups to provide local education and training opportunities. In addition to the $138 million behavioral health hospital, Prisma has plans to spend approximately $7 million on facility projects for the Greenville Memorial Hospital campus associated with behavioral health services, which include expansion of intensive outpatient programs.

Prisma provides comprehensive behavioral health services across the continuum of care, including inpatient, outpatient, partial hospitalization and intensive outpatient programs, consultative services to inpatient and outpatient medical/surgical services and virtual telepsychiatry from hub sites to its community hospitals, especially its rural hospitals where there is greatest need.

Filed Under: Behavioral Health, Prisma Health News Tagged With: behavior, behavioralhealth, hospital, mental, mentalhealth

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