Grant Awarded to Strengthen Behavioral Healthcare in W.Va.

Certain areas of West Virginia may soon see an increase in behavioral health providers.

Over $850,000 has been awarded to Marshall University to help boost the number of behavioral health providers in underserved and rural areas of the state.

The grant comes from the Health Resources and Services Administration for the Behavioral Health Workforce Education and Training Program – an agency under the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

The money will be distributed in chunks of about $200,000 annually over the next four years.

The program will help fund clinical internships and placements for students in programs like a Masters in Psychology with Clinical and School emphasis or a Masters in Counseling.

It will provide opportunities to train students in an integrated health care model and include seminars covering a variety of topics like responding to substance use disorders in primary care or trauma-informed care and trauma-focused interventions.

Legislation Aims to Hold Providers to Internet Promises

 The House of Delegates is reviewing legislation that would require Internet providers to offer download speeds of at least 10 megabits per second to promote their broadband service as “high speed,” according to the Charleston Gazette-Mail. 

Many rural West Virginians don’t have Internet speeds anywhere near that. Customers with slow service can’t use TV- and movie-streaming services.

In 2014, Frontier Communications customers filed a class-action lawsuit. It alleges the company provides speeds slower than advertised.

Frontier contends customers get the service they paid for.

Lawmakers say they’ve fielded an increasing number of complaints from constituents about Internet service.

 

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