For more information about Maryland's Core Service Agencies, click here. Treasurer: Lesa Diehl, Allegany County. Secretary: Jessica Sexauer, Worcester County. You may be trying to access this site from a secured browser on the server. Please enable scripts and reload this page. BCRI medical staff are consistently working to implement additional screening and monitoring procedures in order to enhance staff and client safety and limit any potential spread of infection.
Outbreaks can be stressful, and that's okay. Join Our Email List. Our staff provides Baltimore City residents with:. Our Behavioral Health treatment coordinators remain up to date on the many treatment options available to Baltimore City residents and will work in partnership with callers to find the appropriate treatment for their individual recovery needs.
Callers may receive services through the Here2Help Hotline whether they are insured, underinsured, or have no insurance at all. Callers seeking behavioral health treatment will be assessed for their insurance status, and if needed, counselors will help callers who do not have health insurance to apply for coverage.
In FY '20, we connected Baltimore City residents to mental health and substance use treatment appointments. Our primary program helps residents in Anne Arundel County, Baltimore City, and Baltimore County provides care coordination to help people seeking recovery from alcohol and drug use to overcome the challenges that can prevent them from moving successfully through all phases of recovery.
Seven killed, hurt in protests against Sudan military coup KHARTOUM, Oct 25 Reuters - Sudan's military seized power from a transitional government on Monday and a health ministry official said seven people were killed by gunfire and injured in clashes between soldiers and street protesters. The leader of the takeover, General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, dissolved the military-civilian Sovereign He was Tyler, who was diagnosed with an advanced form of prostate cancer in September , became an advocate Facebook knew about, failed to police, abusive content globally - documents Oct 25 Reuters - Facebook employees have warned for years that as the company raced to become a global service it was failing to police abusive content in countries where such speech was likely to cause the most harm, according to interviews with five former employees and internal company documents viewed by Reuters.
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