ST. CLOUD – A new unit at CentraCare's St. Cloud Hospital is promising to provide faster and more comfortable assessments of emergency patients experiencing mental health crises — an area sorely lacking across the state.
The EmPATH unit, which opened Monday, is expected to streamline service for psychiatric care, which is the sixth most common reason patients visit St. Cloud's emergency room and equates to nearly 4,000 patients every year.
"We didn't have a place for the patients who need stability — and [for those who] we think we can get stability in a 24-hour period," said Dr. Larry Hook, who is leading the EmPATH team at St. Cloud Hospital.
EmPATH, which stands for emergency psychiatric assessment, treatment and healing, is a model of care that transitions patients away from often chaotic emergency departments into a calming setting where they can be assessed and receive a tailored treatment plan from nurses, psychiatrists and psychotherapists.
Hook said the hospital's emergency department has for decades provided mental health nursing and, more recently, the department started staffing psychiatric providers. But often if a person needed inpatient care, they had to sit in the emergency room for a number of hours before they could be admitted to St. Cloud's mental health unit or transferred to another unit in the state or even North Dakota.
"We were seeing a backlog of patients in the emergency room for mental health reasons who needed to be admitted, simply because there are not enough beds across the state for the patients," Hook said.
St. Cloud Hospital is the second in the state to open an EmPATH unit. The first opened in March at M Health Fairview Southdale Hospital. M Health Fairview University of Minnesota Medical Center also plans to open an EmPATH unit for children and adults, according to the organization.
St. Cloud's unit serves patients 18 and older who are out of high school. But the unit could expand to serve child and adolescent patients — an area that's even more underserved in the state.