The UPH-Central Illinois Foundation launched the Young Minds Project to raise $24 million for the new behavioral health center. (The final number depends on how much state and federal funding UnityPoint secures for the project.) UnityPoint Health would pay Peoria County between $8 to $10 million to acquire Heddington Oaks. UnityPoint's plan to repurpose the former Heddington Oaks senior home received a key approval last month when the Peoria County Board cleared the way for its sale. Knepp has said the additional space at Heddington Oaks will double the existing inpatient behavioral health capacity for youth in the Peoria area in the last five years, 2,600 children and adolescents were turned away from Methodist and sent out of town for services. Many more are turned away and referred to out-of-town facilities - some as far away as Chicago. just the need for more services."Īn average of 60 kids and adolescents are admitted to the inpatient behavioral health unit at UnityPoint Health-Methodist every month. We have this growing epidemic of behavioral health. "We have catastrophic needs in this area right now," he said. Keith Knepp, regional president and CEO of UPH-Central Illinois, said the expansion of behavioral health services can't come soon enough. If successful in raising $24 million, UnityPoint's new center would replace the former Heddington Oaks nursing home in West Peoria, a 16-acre property at 2223 W. UnityPoint Health's new inpatient mental health center has received a key piece of funding: a $2 million federal grant for the Child and Adolescent Behavioral Health Center.
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