NYC: Behavioral Health Emergency Assistance Response Division (B-HEARD)
Location
- City: NYC (B-HEARD) – Pilot began June 2021
- Population Size: 8,804,190 (entire city, not pilot)
- Jurisdiction Size: 302.64 sq miles (entire city, not pilot)
Intercept
- 0 – EMS +BH Clinician (B-HEARD)                  Â
- 1 – co-responders
CIT (Crisis Intervention Training) Requirements
- 16,894 NYPD officers and staff -including all patrol officers – trained in CIT between 2015 and 2020, when CIT operations were suspended during COVID-19
Model Components
- Area of Jurisdiction
- Pilot limited to East Harlem and parts of North and Central – Harlem (Area with most MH Calls)
- Plans to gradually expand citywide
- Staffing Structure
- 16 hours a day with 2 teams per shift
- 2 EMTs+1 Social Worker
- Steering Committee chaired by the Mayor’s Office of Community Mental Health (OCMH) with representation from agency partners Health + Hospitals (H+H) and Fire Department of New York (FDNY) as well as, the New York Police Department (NYPD), the NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene (DOHMH)
- OCMH oversees the implementation of this program, facilitating cross-agency coordination and ensuring citywide expansion
- Staff Training/Qualifications
- Clinicians are licensed (Master level)
- 5 weeks of training- all staff (BH+EMS) in the same cohort. Social workers are employed by the NYC public hospital system, H+H
- Dispatch Structure
- Dispatched through 911
- NYPD patrol officers and EMS field units can also request B-HEARD directly
- Â
Operating Structure
-
- Operations
- Mental health calls, lower acuity, no violence/no weapon
- 911 operators use standard triage to categorize call as mental health call
- Teams are dispatched by 911 operators in appropriate situations that occur within the catchment area
- In the first six months of pilot, B-HEARD average response time was less than 14 minutes
- Funding Mechanisms: Funded through NYC Health +Hospitals and FDNY
- Management Structure
- Social Work staff are employees of the NYC public hospital system (H+H) and EMT/ Paramedic staff are employees of FDNY. All staff are managed through their organization’s staffing structure                                   Â
- Supplies/Equipment
- EMT+BH clinician ride together in vehicle from FDNY- marked as such             Â
- Operations
Data Systems & Collection
- Data Collection:
- The following metrics are tracked and reported on the OCMH website:
- Total number of mental health 911 calls
- Number of mental health 911 calls eligible for B-HEARD
- Number of eligible mental health 911 calls that B-HEARD Teams are dispatched to
- Percent of eligible mental health 911 calls B-HEARD Teams are dispatched to
- Number of unique individuals B-HEARD reached
- The following metrics are tracked and reported on the OCMH website:
- Highlighted Statistics/Outcomes:
- In the first six months of the pilot:
- In the B-HEARD response, 92% of people accepted assistance
- 46% of people assisted by B-HEARD were transported to a hospital for additional care – a much lower percentage than the traditional response, in which 87% of people were transported to a hospital.
- 47% of people served by B-HEARD were served in their community, with options for behavioral healthcare that were not previously part of emergency response
- In the first six months of the pilot:
Key Takeaways
- Cross-agency collaboration and buy-in is critical
- Determining which calls/ situations are most appropriate for this response continues to be a work in progress
- Ensure safety for everyone
- Community engagement and buy-in is key