News Releases
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
For
more information, contact:
The
University of
Communications
and Marketing
Sheila
Champlin – (901) 448-4957 or
Dena
Owens – (901) 44804072
The Crisis Center Relocates to
The University
of
____________________________________________________
With the support of the UT Health Science Center, the
volunteers of the Richard G. Farmer & Allen O. Battle Crisis Center have a
new home from which to continue to provide vital services to the community’s
vulnerable members. Richard G. Farmer,
MD, and Allen O. Battle, PhD, founded the Crisis Center in 1970 as a 24-hour
emotional lifeline for those in distress.
Dr. Farmer, a UTHSC alumnus, is a
psychiatrist who specializes in treatment for anxiety, major depression
and opioid addiction. Dr. Battle has taught and practiced psychology
at UTHSC for more than 53 years. In
September, he received a Lifetime Achievement Award as a Health Care Hero for
his decades-long impact in education and crisis intervention.
At the Crisis Center, trained volunteers, using a
combination of empathic listening, risk assessment, and crisis intervention,
provide callers with immediate assistance and link them with the long-term
resources they need to cope and overcome. The program is free, safe, and
confidential.
Roughly 150 Crisis Center volunteers staff its
hotline and receive around 20,000 calls each year. They respond to such issues as mental
illness, addiction, domestic violence, sexual assault, grief, and suicide.
“We know that stigma, fear and shame are often barriers to accessing mental health or social services,” said Mike LaBonte, executive director for the program. “As a confidential telephone program, the Crisis Center often serves as a point of entry for those who might not otherwise access the help they need.”
The Crisis Center is uniquely
positioned to provide immediate emotional support to those in crisis and
encourage treatment and compliance among the chronically mentally ill and those
struggling with addiction and in recovery. This role is critical and at
times life-saving. “Approximately 5
percent of clients have some level of suicidal ideation when they call the
Crisis Center,” LaBonte explained. The Crisis Center is part of the
Substance Abuse & Mental Health Services Administration’s (SAMHSA) National
Suicide Prevention Lifeline. SAMHSA is
part of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
“Our volunteers are simply
overwhelmed by this generous donation of space by the
He noted that community involvement
is a big component of the work of the Crisis Center. “As a
volunteer-powered agency, we rely on our volunteers to provide the
service. They take that training and experience back out into the
community and become an ongoing source of strength. It's a way the
community can collaborate in its own support system,” LaBonte added.
If you need help call (901) CRISIS-7, or toll free 1-800-273-TALK. If you would like to help by volunteering, please call (901) 871-0343.
As the flagship statewide academic health system, the
mission of the University of Tennessee Health Science Center is to bring the
benefits of the health sciences to the achievement and maintenance of human
health, with a focus on the citizens of Tennessee and the region, by pursuing
an integrated program of education, research, clinical care, and public
service. Offering a broad range of
postgraduate training opportunities, the main campus
is located in
###
This study
quantifies the economic impact of the UTHSC on the economy of the state of Tennessee for FY2010.
Contact Us
920 Madison Avenue
Suite 434
Memphis, TN 38163
Phone: (901) 448-5544
Fax: (901) 448-8640
