Yeager, ValerieBurns, Ashlyn BrookeMenachemi, NirVest, Joshua R.Mazurenko, OlenaSalyers, Michelle2024-07-082024-07-082024-06https://hdl.handle.net/1805/42032Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI)One in eight emergency department visits involves a behavioral health crisis. Yet, emergency departments are rarely equipped to meet the needs of patients experiencing a behavioral health crisis. Innovative care delivery models, such as behavioral health crisis care services delivered by mental health treatment facilities, offer a promising alternative to the emergency department. As decisions are being made around reimbursement and expansion of behavioral health crisis care models, empirical evidence on the relationship between these services and emergency department utilization is needed. The purpose of this dissertation is to 1) assess availability of behavioral health crisis care services across the United States; 2) identify community-level characteristics associated with availability of behavioral health crisis care services; and 3) quantify changes in emergency department utilization associated with availability of behavioral health crisis care services. In doing so, this dissertation identifies gaps in the nation’s existing behavioral health crisis care system and highlights the value of ensuring access to these life-saving services. As national implementation of the new 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline is underway, findings from this dissertation may help inform efforts to transform the crisis continuum and ensure access to care for all individuals experiencing a crisis.en-USAvailability of Behavioral Health Crisis Care and Associated Changes in Emergency Department UtilizationDissertation