Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

Santa Clara County is looking to build a new psychiatric facility serving children and teens. Rendering courtesy Santa Clara County.

In a bid to create desperately needed psychiatric hospital beds for children and teens in crisis, Santa Clara County officials last month unveiled plans to build a new state-of-the-art facility right in the heart of Santa Clara Valley Medical Center.

The 77-bed hospital building, which is expected to cost $233 million and finish construction by the end of 2023, would consolidate emergency psychiatric services and inpatient care for those suffering from mental illness across all ages. The design carves out one unit specifically for adolescent youth ages 13 to 17, and another for children age 12 and younger.

If built, the facility would fill a significant gap in mental health care that has plagued Santa Clara County for years. With a dearth of psychiatric beds in the region, teens and young children who are faced with a mental health crisis are frequently forced to travel long distances in order to receive care. Families are sent as far as Sacramento or Bakersfield in order to find an inpatient psychiatric bed for their child, making a difficult experience even worse.

Hundreds of kids in Santa Clara County are admitted to psychiatric hospitals each year, almost all of whom must seek care beyond the county line. Limited beds are available for teens in south San Jose, but none are available for children age 12 and younger.

The proposed 190,000-square-foot hospital building has two 21-bed units for adults on a separate floor from the adolescent and child units, with special attention to ensure adult and child patients never cross paths. The building will have a bridge connecting to the emergency department as well as space devoted to mental health urgent care, relocating most mental health services spread out across the Valley Medical Center (VMC) campus.

The pediatric unit includes so-called “med-psych” beds, available for patients who need both medical and psychiatric treatment at the same time. No such beds are currently available anywhere in the Bay Area.

County Supervisor Joe Simitian, a longtime advocate for a youth psychiatric hospital, said in a statement that children suffering from mental health crises should be able to receive treatment in their own community rather than being forced to travel to Vallejo, Concord, Santa Rosa and Sacramento for care.

“On any given day, more than a dozen Santa Clara County children are being hospitalized for psychiatric emergencies outside the County,” Simitian said. “Separating these kids from their families at one of the toughest times in their lives, that’s just hell on them.”

Teens needing inpatient psychiatric care will have separate rooms in an area cordoned off from adult patients. Rendering courtesy Santa Clara County.

Though Santa Clara County has a statewide reputation as a progressive leader in mental health care, the lack of hospital beds has been a nagging problem that county officials have been trying to solve for close to a decade. Previous efforts to create an adolescent psychiatric unit go back to at least 2011, each time with the county asking outside agencies to bear the high cost of building and operating such a facility.

The breakthrough finally came in 2018, when county supervisors agreed that Santa Clara County — not a private hospital or outside health care provider — should take the lead with its own new facility. The future facility is expected to take patients referred from Kaiser Permanente, El Camino Hospital and Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital Stanford, none of which have inpatient psychiatric services for children, and will accept those with and without insurance.

While serving children and teens was the goal, the new facility will serve mostly adults and have a full complement of adult psychiatric services. According to staff, the existing psychiatric buildings at Valley Medical Center are in poor condition and have serious design flaws that are not ideal for patients and pose a security risk, including “blind” hallways and features that are not fixed to the floor.

The Barbara Arons Pavilion, where staff report being frequently assaulted by patients, was built in the 1980s and still has mostly shared rooms, which is no longer the norm for psychiatric facilities. The newly designed hospital building would replace the pavilion.

Kevin Forestieri writes for the Mountain View Voice, a sister publication of PaloAltoOnline.com.

Kevin Forestieri writes for the Mountain View Voice, a sister publication of PaloAltoOnline.com.

Kevin Forestieri writes for the Mountain View Voice, a sister publication of PaloAltoOnline.com.

Kevin Forestieri writes for the Mountain View Voice, a sister publication of PaloAltoOnline.com.

Kevin Forestieri is the editor of Mountain View Voice, joining the company in 2014. Kevin has covered local and regional stories on housing, education and health care, including extensive coverage of Santa...

Join the Conversation

3 Comments

  1. This is fantastic news. Although the price tag is seemingly outrageous and I am wondering what the cost break down is, I am happy that this facility is being built to help anyone suffering a mental health issue. Families being sent to Bakersfield or Sacramento for services is not an ideal solution. It’s just tough on hospitals to serve patients that need immediate mental health services. I’m happy our county is stepping up and building this facility. This is great news for me too as I appreciate this effort, and any of my fellow palymoms and palaltonians that need access to mental health care. There is one detail form the article that I would like a follow up on because I am curious about it. What is causing so many teens and children in our area to be hospitalized for psychiatric emergencies? What are some of the issues or things they may be going through? Is this an increase because of the current pandemic? It seems very sad and I feel sorry for anyone going through mental health issues. It said on any given day more than a dozen SC county children are being hospitalized out of our area. So you can infer that we may be having a serious problem in our area regarding the mental health of children as that seems like it is an overflow of what our hospitals can handle. Thank you for all of those of you who will work on this worthy project. My only wish is that it could be completed a little faster than in 2023.

  2. The history of psychiatric facilities in Santa Clara County is one of decline rather than meeting growing needs. This plan is wonderful news and deserves wide support.

  3. Great news. So needed. Sadly many of the foster youth I volunteer with need such a facility when serious illness results from their traumas.

Leave a comment