Organizations serving the homeless in North Texas increasingly provide mental health care services in addition to traditional aid like food and warming centers.
Dallas-based groups Our Calling and Austin Street Center both have multiple mental health care providers in their facilities every day.
Teresa Thomas, a spokesperson for Austin Street, said a lot of individuals that visit the center are struggling emotionally, albeit not necessarily dealing with a severe mental illness.
“Everyone at Austin Street Center is grieving the loss of something. So, the loss of a job, the loss of a home, the loss of a loved one,” Thomas said. “Then they are unfortunately just unable to cope.”
Both Thomas and Wayne Walker, CEO and Pastor of Our Calling in Dallas, emphasized that people experiencing homelessness go through a lot of traumas while living out on the streets. They say months and years of not feeling safe and not having a respite creates a fragile mental state.
“Many of them are abused or assaulted weekly and some of them even daily,” Walker said. “Those are traumas that people are dealing with in their lives that cause significant emotional, spiritual, physical, mental health crises that are far beyond what most people would think is the homeless experience.”
The staff at Our Calling is trained by mental health care providers to be better prepared for the scenarios they encounter.
The City of Denton, which recently opened a new community shelter, is also determined to address the mental health concerns of its homeless population.
Read more at KERANews.org.
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