BBH's Office of Adult Services, assures and provides access to services to meet the mental health and co-occurring needs – such as substance use disorder or intellectual/developmental disability – for adults to live, learn, work, and participate actively in our communities. The Office of Adult Services also establishes standards to ensure effective and culturally competent care to promote recovery, wellness, and self-determination.
Community Engagement Specialists
Alternatives to Institutional Care
- Complex Support
- Forensic
- Forensic Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities
- Justice Reinvestment Initiative Projects
Housing
Public Community Infrastructure (There When You Need Them)
- Continuum Enhancement for Statewide Service
- CORE Support for Providers
Support During Times of Crisis
- Disaster Response & Disaster Case Management
- Quick Response Teams (QRT) Lives on the Line Interview
Purpose, Work, and Participation for I/DD
- Day and Community Support Programs
- Customized Employment
- Family Support Program Overview
- Family Support Program Policy
- Family Support Program Application
- Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) Funds for You
- Unmet Needs Policy
- Unmet Needs Application
- Waitlist Support Grant Policy
- Waitlist Support Grant Application
- Waitlist Support Grant Invoice
Peer Support
- Peer Centers
- Peer Services
- Peer Coaches
Treatment for Families and Adults
Comprehensive Behavioral Health Centers
West Virginia Certified Community Behavioral Health Clinics
Drug Free Mom & Babies Outpatient Team Support
Ryan Brown Addiction Prevention and Recovery Fund In 2017 the West Virginia State Legislature created the Ryan Brown Addiction Prevention and Recovery Fund. As a result, in 2018 the state awarded $20.8 million in grant funding to nine substance use disorder programs to expand residential treatment services across West Virginia and increase the residential treatment capacity and the number of treatment beds in the state by 254%. Project Hope for Women and Children opened on December 6, 2019 and the other 8 Ryan Brown residential programs, in various stages of construction, licensing approval, and so on, are anticipated to open in the coming months.
Pregnant & Parenting Residential Treatment Project Hope, the first of the Ryan Brown programs to get off the ground, allows families the opportunity to stay together and thrive as parents obtain life skills to ensure the continuation of recovery. This is one crucial step to decrease the number of children in foster care, which has risen by nearly 50% in the last 3 years primarily due to West Virginia’s SUD crisis.