INDIANAPOLIS – NewVista Behavioral Health announced Tuesday it is expanding into Indiana with Ethan Crossing of Indianapolis.
The Ohio-based company is hoping to bring its leadership in developing and operating behavioral health hospitals and substance abuse rehabilitation centers to the Indianapolis area.
“We understand the need for specialized, evidence-based programming is so vital to a successful and sustainable recovery for many,” Isaac Rosedale, president and CEO of NewVista, said in a press release. “Hoosiers currently have limited resources, especially for those in rural Indiana, and that is why we are extremely proud to bring this all-encompassing addiction treatment and behavioral health campus to the area.”
They are planning on a $6 million renovation that will feature a 42-bed hospital and inpatient behavioral health unit as well as a 46-bed residential Substance Use Disorder unit.
The campus is intended to treat both mental health and substance use disorders and will have outpatient addiction treatment programs, according to NewVista.
NewVista said that the healing environment will serve adults and seniors and offer a care including:
- Medication-Assisted Treatment
- Therapeutic interventions that promote stress reduction
- Recreational therapy
- Expressive therapy
NewVista plans on accepting most forms of commercial insurance and Medicaid.
The campus is expected to open this summer.
-
Shooting on Indy’s east side leaves 1 dead
A person died in a shooting on the east side of Indianapolis, near E. Washington St., on Monday evening.Police search for driver in deadly hit-and-run on Indy's west side
An Indianapolis family is seeking justice after a 66-year-old man was killed in a hit-and-run on the west side of the city over the weekend.Alamo Drafthouse Cinema opens on Indy’s northwest side
The theater is located at the former Georgetown Cinema, and patrons can have their food and drinks delivered to their seats by servers.Scammers are preying on people searching for new jobs
Job hunting can be difficult enough as it is. But now scammers are looking to take advantage of those people hoping to land their dream job.