What is a pact referral?

What is a pact referral?

PACT is a service-delivery model that provides comprehensive, locally based treatment to people with serious and persistent mental illnesses. The PACT team provides these necessary services 24 hours a day, seven days a week, 365 days a year.

What are PACT services?

The Program of Assertive Community Treatment (PACT) is a multidisciplinary service team approach to providing intensive, community-based, and recovery-oriented psychiatric treatment, assertive outreach, rehabilitation, and support to individuals with serious mental illness.

What is the PACT team?

What is PACT? A Patient Aligned Care Team (PACT) involves each Veteran working together with health care professionals to plan for the whole-person care and life-long health and wellness.

What does pact stand for in mental health?

Program of Assertive Community Treatment
Program of Assertive Community Treatment (PACT) PACT is for people with severe mental health disorders, who frequently need care in a psychiatric hospital or other crisis service.

What is Program for Assertive Community Treatment Pact?

The Program for Assertive Community Treatment (PACT) is a community-based program for adults with serious and persistent mental illness who require ongoing, intensive treatment.

What is Program for Assertive Community Treatment?

The Assertive Community Treatment (ACT) program offers treatment, rehabilitation, and support services using a person-centered, recovery-based approach to individuals who have been diagnosed with severe and persistent mental illness.

How does the PACT program work?

The Professional Apprenticeship Career Tracks (PACT) program enlists Sailors into a monitored general apprenticeship program. This program provides apprentice-level formal training and on-the-job training that leads to a viable career field within two years on board their first Permanent Duty Station.

Who Uses Assertive Community Treatment?

Who Assertive Community Treatment Serves

  • Persons with severe symptoms of mental illness.
  • People with significant thought disorders such as schizophrenia.
  • Young adults experiencing early-stage schizophrenia.
  • People with stigmatized mental illnesses.
  • Persons with high rates of substance abuse.

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