Some people call 911 a dozen times or more per month describing emotional upheaval, sometimes reporting visions, voices and even suicidal thoughts.
Police and paramedics who must respond say they are left to triage an escalating mental health crisis that can really only be eased with long-term counseling, medication, case management and meaningful intervention. That's why Maplewood police and firefighters/paramedics have teamed up to create the city's first-ever mental health outreach team.
"You don't realize how many calls are mental health-related," said Maplewood officer Emily Burt-McGregor, who estimates half her calls have a mental health component. "A lot of times, crimes tie back to people struggling with mental health issues."
The team is proactively reaching out to those frequent 911 callers who exhibit symptoms of mental illness and their families, offering to meet regularly to discuss how they can help. Sometimes, it's connecting people to services. Other times, it's encouraging them to stick to their already prescribed therapy and medication routines. In all cases, it's a calmer, safer opportunity to talk through issues than a panicked 911 call.
"We are doing more case management, behind-the-scenes work," said Maplewood community paramedic Rochelle Hawthorne, who is also trained as a firefighter.
The motivation is to provide real help, lower the number of calls for service and avert those crisis 911 calls where lives are in danger.
"Our goal is for everyone in the community to be healthy and safe," said Michael Mondor, Maplewood's chief of emergency medical services.
They join a growing list of communities including St. Paul, Washington County and Minnetonka that are deploying a host of new strategies to help people struggling with mental health issues who call 911. One mental health advocate says it's a step in the right direction.