ACMH Services
ACMH enables adults to develop skills and access treatment, services and supports in the community in order to attain goals important to them. ACMH serves more than 1,500 individuals and households daily through the following programs
Treatment Apartment Programs
ACMH is licensed by the New York State Office of Mental Health (OMH) to provide rehabilitative services in the home in leased apartments in Manhattan, Queens and the Bronx.
Transitional Community Residences
Transitional residences serve adults with a serious mental illness who are formerly homeless or leaving hospitals, state psychiatric centers or incarceration.
Supportive Apartment Programs
ACMH is funded by OMH and the NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene (DOHMH), to offer permanent housing with supportive case management in leased apartments throughout Manhattan, Queens and the Bronx.
Permanent Affordable Apartment Buildings
These projects provide units and on-site services for adults with serious mental illness. At Markus Gardens and E. 144th Street, there are additional supports for young adults, ages 18-25, to promote positive young adult development.
Care Management Services
ACMH is under contract with Medicaid Health Homes, health systems and DOHMH, to assist adults in managing chronic mental health, substance use, and medical conditions through community outreach, engagement, and care coordination.
Residential Crisis Support (Respite)
Located in Washington Heights and the East Village, this program offers respite for guests experiencing a mental health crisis or transitioning from hospitalization in a home-like setting with round the clock peer support.
Critical Time Intervention
Multidisciplinary mental health teams providing intensive outreach, engagement, care coordination and housing placement to homeless and hospitalized adults.
Assertive Community
Treatment (ACT)
A mobile multidisciplinary mental health team offering treatment, rehabilitation, case management and support services in the Bronx.
ACMH services reduce hospitalization, incarceration and homelessness by facilitating increased participation in wellness self-management, engagement with outpatient care, connection to social, peer and natural supports, education, and employment.