Our Work

Mobile Crisis Intervention Services

 MOBILE CRISIS PERFORMANCE IMPROVEMENT CENTER (PIC)

Connecticut's Mobile Crisis Intervention Services, (formerly known as EMPS), provides 24/7 mobile children's mental health crisis services free of charge to all children in Connecticut through a network of fourteen provider sites across the state. Trained mental health clinicians are deployed to homes, schools and community locations to provide in-person crisis stabilization services and linkage to additional services for children in Connecticut.

CHDI serves as the Performance Improvement Center for the State’s Mobile Crisis Intervention Services through a contract with the Connecticut Department of Children and Families (DCF).

The Mobile Crisis Intervention Services Performance Improvement Center (PIC) carries out a number of functions for mobile crisis providers, DCF and others to improve mobile crisis service quality and outcomes, including:

  • Analyze and report on number of families served
  • Examine the frequency of face-to-face contacts with children and families (mobility rates), and how quickly providers respond to crises
  • Examine changes in behavior problems and functioning for youth following Mobile Crisis services
  • Deliver a standardized training curriculum to the statewide network of Mobile Crisis clinicians
  • Work with providers and other stakeholders to facilitate practice development activities that improve and standardize Mobile Crisis services

We use the data and results to work directly with providers to examine their services, improve them where necessary, and promote the best possible outcomes for children and their families.

View our monthly, quarterly and annual Mobile Crisis reports.

We have seen dramatic improvements in service access, quality and outcomes since we started working with mobile crisis providers in 2009.

  • More children and families access mobile crisis services.
    The total number of children and families served more than doubled between 2009 and 2019. Though volume has fluctuated during the pandemic, Mobile Crisis continues to serve a high number of children.
  • Mobile Crisis Intervention Services are highly responsive.
    Rates of face-to-face contact with families that request services is at 90% or higher at nearly all mobile crisis sites.
  • Children improve their behaviors and functioning.
    Parents and clinicians see improvements in problem behaviors and functioning by the end of mobile crisis intervention.
  • Mobile Crisis Intervention Services clinicians are well-trained.
    Hundreds of clinicians have been trained in the core competencies related to providing mobile crisis services in the community.

CHDI has helped Connecticut establish a nationally recognized Mobile Response and Stabilization Services (MRSS) program with strong continuous quality improvement through our work as Connecticut's Mobile Crisis Performance Improvement Center. We are now sharing these best practices with states and communities across the country through our national MRSS consultation.


RELATED RESOURCES:

To learn more about the Mobile Crisis Intervention Services Performance Improvement Center or the MRSS QLC, contact Kellie Randall.

 


Kellie Randall - Director of Quality Improvement
krandall@chdi.org
860-679-8098

Mobile Crisis Reports