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H79SM084831

Project Grant

Overview

Grant Description
Trauma-focused treatment and services for Greater Houston's children and adolescents - Memorial Hermann Health System (MHHS), is the largest, non-profit, integrated health system in Greater Houston, serving over 2 million patients across 320 sites in Southeast Texas.

Our 14 hospitals, anchors within their respective communities, cover Houston’s metropolitan service area with a population of 6.37 million. MHHS’ Behavioral Health Services (BHS) provides quality behavioral health services to children, adolescents, and adults through a continuum of programs that span 11 hospitals and over 13 community settings.

Almost 50% of our patient population is uninsured and low-income. We offer trauma-informed care focusing on Medicaid, uninsured/low-income, at-risk children and adolescents living in our four county catchment area: Harris, Montgomery, Brazoria, and Fort Bend.

Our grant program provides a continuum of services from screening and comprehensive assessment to treatment and prevention to our target population. We capitalize upon the patient flow from our emergency departments, our mental health crisis clinics, and other BHS programs.

Grant-funded trauma-focused behavioral health clinicians will be embedded into our mental health crisis clinics, benefit from the existing interdisciplinary care team, to offer trauma-informed care to at-risk children and youth. We leverage technology to offer in-person or virtual care.

Referrals will be generated from our partners, which include the Harris Center and Tri-County Behavioral Health (local mental health authorities) and three school districts (Humble, Spring Branch, and New Caney ISDs).

Our overall goal is to increase access to trauma-informed care for vulnerable children and adolescents and improve patient symptomology. Our grant objectives over the five-year period are: 1) to screen 5,000 children and adolescents across our health system for current or historical trauma; 2) to enroll and treat 625 children and adolescents using trauma-focused cognitive behavioral therapy (TF-CBT) or trauma and grief component therapy (TGCT) to reduce patient symptomology by 20%; and 3) to offer 2 educational sessions per year targeting parents at our partner schools to help them understand trauma and what steps they can take to prevent trauma in their children.

We dedicate time for outreach and to engage new stakeholders to ensure our community is informed of this invaluable grant program.
Funding Goals
SAMHSA WAS GIVEN THE AUTHORITY TO ADDRESS PRIORITY SUBSTANCE ABUSE TREATMENT, PREVENTION AND MENTAL HEALTH NEEDS OF REGIONAL AND NATIONAL SIGNIFICANCE THROUGH ASSISTANCE (GRANTS AND COOPERATIVE AGREEMENTS) TO STATES, POLITICAL SUBDIVISIONS OF STATES, INDIAN TRIBES AND TRIBAL ORGANIZATIONS, AND OTHER PUBLIC OR NONPROFIT PRIVATE ENTITIES. UNDER THESE SECTIONS, CSAT, CMHS AND CSAP SEEK TO EXPAND THE AVAILABILITY OF EFFECTIVE SUBSTANCE ABUSE TREATMENT AND RECOVERY SERVICES AVAILABLE TO AMERICANS TO IMPROVE THE LIVES OF THOSE AFFECTED BY ALCOHOL AND DRUG ADDITIONS, AND TO REDUCE THE IMPACT OF ALCOHOL AND DRUG ABUSE ON INDIVIDUALS, FAMILIES, COMMUNITIES AND SOCIETIES AND TO ADDRESS PRIORITY MENTAL HEALTH NEEDS OF REGIONAL AND NATIONAL SIGNIFICANCE AND ASSIST CHILDREN IN DEALING WITH VIOLENCE AND TRAUMATIC EVENTS THROUGH BY FUNDING GRANT AND COOPERATIVE AGREEMENT PROJECTS. GRANTS AND COOPERATIVE AGREEMENTS MAY BE FOR (1) KNOWLEDGE AND DEVELOPMENT AND APPLICATION PROJECTS FOR TREATMENT AND REHABILITATION AND THE CONDUCT OR SUPPORT OF EVALUATIONS OF SUCH PROJECTS, (2) TRAINING AND TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE, (3) TARGETED CAPACITY RESPONSE PROGRAMS (4) SYSTEMS CHANGE GRANTS INCLUDING STATEWIDE FAMILY NETWORK GRANTS AND CLIENT-ORIENTED AND CONSUMER RUN SELF-HELP ACTIVITIES AND (5) PROGRAMS TO FOSTER HEALTH AND DEVELOPMENT OF CHILDREN, (6) COORDINATION AND INTEGRATION OF PRIMARY CARE SERVICES INTO PUBLICLY-FUNDED COMMUNITY MENTAL HEALTH CENTERS AND OTHER COMMUNITY-BASED BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SETTINGS
Place of Performance
Texas United States
Geographic Scope
State-Wide
Analysis Notes
Amendment Since initial award the End Date has been shortened from 12/30/26 to 09/29/26 and the total obligations have increased 100% from $800,000 to $1,600,000.
Memorial Hermann Health System was awarded Project Grant H79SM084831 worth $1,600,000 from the Division of Grants Management in December 2022 with work to be completed primarily in Texas United States. The grant has a duration of 3 years 9 months and was awarded through assistance program 93.243 Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Projects of Regional and National Significance. The Project Grant was awarded through grant opportunity National Child Traumatic Stress Initiative – Category III, Community Treatment and Service (CTS) Centers.

Status
(Ongoing)

Last Modified 1/20/26

Period of Performance
12/31/22
Start Date
9/29/26
End Date
87.0% Complete

Funding Split
$1.6M
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$1.6M
Total Obligated
100.0% Federal Funding
0.0% Non-Federal Funding

Activity Timeline

Interactive chart of timeline of amendments to H79SM084831

Transaction History

Modifications to H79SM084831

Additional Detail

Award ID FAIN
H79SM084831
SAI Number
H79SM084831-2695033668
Award ID URI
SAI UNAVAILABLE
Awardee Classifications
Nonprofit With 501(c)(3) IRS Status (Other Than An Institution Of Higher Education)
Awarding Office
75SAMH SAMHSA Division of Grants Management
Funding Office
75MS00 SAMHSA CENTER FOR MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES
Awardee UEI
KDX5Y29YQUL1
Awardee CAGE
1ZKE8
Performance District
TX-90
Senators
John Cornyn
Ted Cruz

Budget Funding

Federal Account Budget Subfunction Object Class Total Percentage
Health Surveillance and Program Support, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, Health and Human Services (075-1362) Health care services Grants, subsidies, and contributions (41.0) $800,000 100%
Modified: 1/20/26