We’re here 24/7 to listen and help.

Crisis Intervention and Mental Health Stabilization

For adults moving from acute mental health crisis into ongoing residential care. Villa Healing Center receives adults after acute stabilization, with 24-hour clinical staffing and evidence-based therapy.

Crisis intervention is the structured, time-limited response that stabilizes a person in acute mental health crisis. If you are in crisis right now, the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline (call or text 988) and 911 are the immediate resources. Villa Healing Center is a residential mental health facility for adults; we are not a crisis hotline or psychiatric emergency room, but we receive adults after acute crisis stabilization for ongoing residential care.

What Crisis Intervention Is

Crisis intervention is short-term, focused care that responds to a mental health crisis with the goal of immediate safety, symptom stabilization, and connection to longer-term treatment. The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration describes the national crisis care system as having three core components: someone to contact, someone to respond, and a safe place for help. Understanding the causes of self-harm is critical for effective intervention. By identifying underlying issues, mental health professionals can tailor approaches that resonate with individuals in crisis.

A mental health crisis can involve suicidal thoughts or behaviors, a psychotic episode, severe panic or anxiety, an acute trauma response, or any moment when a person can no longer keep themselves safe without help. Crisis intervention exists to bridge that moment to ongoing care, not to provide ongoing care itself.

Researchers such as Albert Roberts have described a structured crisis intervention model: rapid biopsychosocial assessment, safety planning, identification of the precipitating problem, exploration of the person’s coping options, and a clear handoff to follow-up care. This crisis intervention model is widely used in clinical and emergency settings.

Crisis Resources vs Residential MH Treatment (4-stage continuum-of-care comparison)

Crisis intervention and residential mental health treatment are different stages of care. Crisis services respond to acute danger; residential treatment supports recovery after the acute danger has passed.

Four stages of care, side by side

Stage

Setting

Duration

What it does

Who provides it

Crisis hotline or text line

Phone, text, online chat

One conversation, repeat as needed

Immediate emotional support, safety assessment, resource routing

988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline, Crisis Text Line (741741)

Mobile crisis response

In the community, in person

Hours

Field assessment, safety planning, transport to higher level of care if needed

LA County Psychiatric Mobile Response Teams (PMRT), local mobile crisis teams

Emergency stabilization

Hospital ED, crisis stabilization unit

Hours to a few days

Acute psychiatric evaluation, medication, involuntary hold under WIC 5150 when criteria are met

Hospital ER, county-designated crisis stabilization units

Residential MH treatment

State-licensed mental health facility

Several weeks (set by clinical recommendation)

Ongoing therapy, medication management, integrated treatment of co-occurring conditions in a safe living environment

Villa Healing Center and similar residential mental health facilities

 

Crisis services are the bridge; residential treatment is the next stage. The Villa Healing Center operates in the residential stage and accepts referrals from hospital ERs, crisis stabilization units, mobile crisis teams, clinicians, and family members directly. If you are in the crisis stage right now, the 988 Lifeline or 911 are the right calls first.

When to Call for Crisis Help

A mental health crisis can include several different presentations, and the right resource depends on what is happening.

If a person is in immediate danger to themselves or others, the right call is 911. Law enforcement and emergency medical responders are dispatched, and the person is taken to the nearest hospital emergency department for psychiatric evaluation. In California, an emergency department can place a 72-hour involuntary hold under Welfare and Institutions Code 5150 when a person is a danger to self, a danger to others, or gravely disabled due to mental health condition.

If a person is having suicidal thoughts, severe emotional distress, a panic attack, or a moment of overwhelming hopelessness but is not in immediate physical danger, the right resource is the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline. 988 is free, available 24 hours a day, confidential, and reachable by call or text.

If a person needs in-person evaluation but does not need an emergency department, mobile crisis teams respond in the community. In Los Angeles County, the Department of Mental Health operates Psychiatric Mobile Response Teams that respond 24 hours a day to mental health emergencies, with field clinicians dispatched typically within 60 minutes of a referral. The LACDMH 24/7 Help Line is (800) 854-7771.

Where Villa Healing Center Fits in the Continuum of Care

Villa Healing Center is a residential mental health facility for adults, licensed by the California Department of Social Services. Our role in the crisis continuum is the residential stage: we receive adults after acute crisis stabilization elsewhere and provide several weeks of structured residential mental health treatment.

Adults arrive at Villa Healing from several pathways. Some are referred directly from a hospital emergency department after a 72-hour hold or after evaluation. Others are referred by a crisis stabilization unit, by a hospital inpatient psychiatric unit, or by a mobile crisis team. Some are referred by a therapist, psychiatrist, or primary care provider who recognizes that a person needs a higher level of care than weekly sessions can provide. Family members can also reach out directly to admissions to begin the conversation. Trauma recovery is a complex process that often requires professional support and time.

What we do not provide: mobile crisis response, psychiatric emergency department services, involuntary 5150 holds, or 24-hour crisis hotline coverage. If you need any of those, call 988 for immediate support or 911 for an emergency.

What we do provide: residential mental health treatment for adults whose crisis has been acutely stabilized and who need ongoing therapy, psychiatric medication management, and a safe living environment to continue stabilization. Treatment combines individual therapy, group therapy including dedicated skills groups, family therapy when clinically appropriate, psychiatric medication management, and integrative wellness programming. A licensed clinician is onsite 24 hours a day.

What a Post-Crisis Residential Admission at Villa Healing Looks Like

Each admission begins with a clinical assessment by a licensed therapist, scheduled as quickly as the referring clinician or family member can coordinate. The assessment establishes the primary diagnosis, any co-occurring mental health or substance use conditions, the level of safety risk going forward, and the treatment plan.

For adults referred directly from a hospital emergency department or crisis stabilization unit, our admissions team coordinates with the discharging clinician on transition logistics and continuity of medication. Adults discharged on a psychiatric medication regimen have that regimen reviewed by our psychiatric prescriber within the first 48 hours of admission, and adjustments are made based on clinical response.

A typical week in residential includes individual therapy sessions, group therapy including dedicated Dialectical Behavior Therapy skills groups, family therapy on a scheduled basis when clinically appropriate, psychiatric medication management visits, and integrative wellness programming. Length of stay is set by clinical recommendation; most adults benefit from several weeks of residential care followed by step-down to continued support.

Conditions We Treat Post-Crisis

Villa Healing Center treats adults whose acute crisis was driven by an underlying mental health condition. Each condition has a dedicated clinical page with the specific therapies, medications, and clinical framework used at Villa Healing.

Insurance and Admissions

Villa Healing Center accepts most major commercial insurance for residential mental health care, including residential admissions following acute crisis stabilization. Most commercial plans cover residential mental health care with prior authorization, and continued-stay reviews are conducted based on medical necessity. Our admissions team is available 24 hours a day to coordinate with a discharging hospital, crisis stabilization unit, or referring clinician.

If your plan is out-of-network, we work with you on out-of-network reimbursement, single-case agreements, and self-pay options. Call (888) 669-0661 to discuss options or to begin the admissions conversation.

Crisis Resources and Residential Care in Woodland Hills and Los Angeles County

Villa Healing Center is located at 23033 Ostronic Drive, Woodland Hills, California 91367, in the San Fernando Valley of Los Angeles County. Our residence is accessible from the 101 and 405 Freeways.

For adults across Los Angeles County in acute mental health crisis, the LA County Department of Mental Health operates Psychiatric Mobile Response Teams that provide 24-hour field response. The LACDMH 24/7 Help Line is (800) 854-7771. The 988 Lifeline routes callers in California to local crisis centers within the SAMHSA network of over 200 contact centers nationwide. For psychiatric emergencies requiring an emergency department, hospitals across Los Angeles County, Ventura County, Orange County, and the broader Southern California region provide acute stabilization, and Villa Healing Center receives referrals from these hospitals for residential continuation of care.

Dr. Courtney Scott

Medical Director

Medical Reviewer

Clinically reviewed by Dr. Courtney Scott, MD, Medical Director at Villa Healing Center. Board-eligible in Emergency Medicine, Internal Medicine, and Addiction Medicine per Villa’s published clinical leadership profile. 
Read more about our team

Frequently Asked Questions

What should I do if I am in a mental health crisis right now?

If you are in immediate danger, call 911. For 24-hour free, confidential mental health crisis support, call or text 988 (Suicide and Crisis Lifeline) or text HOME to 741741 (Crisis Text Line). In Los Angeles County, the LACDMH 24/7 Help Line is (800) 854-7771.

Does Villa Healing Center provide crisis intervention?

Villa Healing Center is a residential mental health facility, not a crisis hotline or psychiatric emergency service. For immediate crisis support, call 988 or 911. We receive adults after acute crisis stabilization for ongoing residential mental health treatment.

How do I get into Villa Healing after a hospital ER visit or 5150 hold?

The discharging hospital, crisis stabilization unit, or treating clinician can refer directly to our admissions team at (888) 669-0661, available 24 hours a day. A family member can also call directly. Our admissions team coordinates the clinical handoff, including continuity of medication and treatment plan, with the discharging clinician.

What is a 5150 hold?

Under California Welfare and Institutions Code 5150, a person can be placed on an involuntary 72-hour psychiatric hold when they are a danger to themselves, a danger to others, or gravely disabled due to a mental health condition. The hold is initiated by law enforcement, a designated mental health clinician, or a hospital emergency department.

What conditions do you treat in residential after a crisis?

We treat adults with depression, anxiety disorders, trauma and post-traumatic stress disorder, suicidal ideation, self-harm behavior, borderline personality disorder, and co-occurring substance use. Each condition has a dedicated clinical page on this site with treatment specifics.

How long is residential treatment after a crisis?

Length of stay is set by clinical recommendation and varies with the primary diagnosis, the presence of co-occurring conditions, and response to treatment. Most adults benefit from several weeks of residential care followed by step-down to outpatient treatment.

Does insurance cover residential treatment after a crisis?

Yes, most commercial insurance plans cover residential mental health care with prior authorization, and continued-stay reviews are conducted based on medical necessity. We accept most major carriers and verify benefits on any plan. Call (888) 669-0661 to begin verification.

Can family members reach Villa Healing directly?

Yes. Family members are often the first point of contact, and our admissions team welcomes calls from family members of an adult in crisis. The adult must consent to admission, but the conversation about whether residential treatment is the right next step can start with anyone who is helping.

I am thinking about suicide right now. What do I do?

If you are in immediate danger, call 911. For 24/7 suicide and mental health crisis support, call or text the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline (free, 24/7, confidential). You can also text HOME to 741741 to reach the Crisis Text Line. Villa Healing Center admissions can be reached at (888) 669-0661 once you are safe.

Start the Admissions Conversation

Villa Healing Center admissions are open 24/7. Call (888) 669-0661 to speak with a clinical intake coordinator, or verify benefits to start the conversation about whether residential treatment with integrative wellness is right for your situation.

For those ready to adopt a more complete approach to mental health and wellness, Villa Healing Center provides expert guidance and compassionate care. Contact us today to begin your journey toward balanced, sustainable well-being.