New youth mental-health provider MBF launches to support teens in crisis
MBF Healthcare Partners has developed a mental-health provider called HavenRise. It is a service which will be initially offered to adolescents from 6th to 12th grade. The program, besides the development of teens, will also involve parents and caregivers who will then be provided with a coordinated support facility so that they can help the teens dealing with emotional and mental health issues.
HavenRise provides care at any level at the client’s request: Partial Hospitalization Program (PHP), Intensive Outpatient (IOP), and standard Outpatient (OP) services. The primary goal of the program is to assist teenagers in dealing with the trauma, which could be anxiety, depression or any other area of concern through the provision of structured, evidence-based care, and trauma-informed assistance.
In fact, the work there is not only about clinical treatment. The plan behind HavenRise is to supplement therapy with other supportive services like family therapy, mindfulness groups, expressive therapies, and psychiatric care plus supported education. In this way, young people will become more resilient; they will develop emotional insight and self-confidence.
MBF perceives it not only as a healthcare offer but more of a provider feel the adolescent mental health support in the US is in high demand. The teenage years are a time when the combination of emotional, social, and academic care can work as a prevention measure against the occurrence of any problems in the future.
Caregivers and families are not left out in this connection. Working with parents, HavenRise will create a supportive environment beyond the time of the session. Thus, this holistic care model is a reflection of the fact that teen mental health does not get affected by other factors from the same age group but, rather, that it is interwoven with the surrounding reality.
What is coming is essentially a new resource for adolescents, connecting support in times of crisis with sustained emotional well-being. For teens that are struggling in silence, this could be their lifeline.
