More than a dozen behavioral health centers have closed their doors so far in 2025.
Many organizations cited funding shortfalls as the reason for closing facilities or ending services.
Here are 14 closures to note:
- Tempe, Ariz.-based Crisis Preparation and Recovery is ending its outpatient programs. The center will lay off 73 employees as a result of the closure.
- Renown Health Crisis Care Center in Sparks, Nev., shuttered less than three months after opening. The center cited canceled federal funding as cause for the closure.
- Philadelphia-based Wedge Recovery Centers, which operates seven clinics in the city, will close by the end of May. The decision to close was made after three years of financial losses, CEO Jason McLaughlin wrote in a letter to patients. Declining Medicaid enrollment and rising overhead costs contributed to the challenges.
- Providence Alaska will close its Crisis Recovery Center in Anchorage in May, the Anchorage Daily News reported May 1. The intensive inpatient program for adolescents is the only program of its kind in Alaska. According to Providence, the health system made the decision to close the center after losing a $1.2 million grant from the Alaska state health department.
- Upland, Pa.-based Crozer Health will shut down and lay off more than 2,600 employees. The system stopped accepting behavioral health patients April 28, NPR affiliate WHYY reported.
- ProHealth closed the inpatient psychiatric unit at ProHealth Waukesha (Wis.) Memorial Hospital.
- Vancouver, Wash.-based Columbia River Mental Health will close two of its locations. The behavioral health provider previously paused many of its behavioral health services and furloughed 112 employees.
- Therapeutic Solutions in Spokane Valley, Wash., closed March 14, according to the Spokesman-Review. The company’s Chico, Calif. location will remain open.
- Grand Junction, Colo.-based West Springs Hospital, part of Mind Springs Health, closed March 10. More than 180 employees were laid off as part of the closure. Outpatient services on Mind Springs’ Grand Junction campus remain open.
- Quincy, Mass.-based Ark Behavioral Health permanently closed the (Van Wert) Ohio Recovery Center March 9. The company laid off 85 staff members in the closure.
- Johnstown (Colo.) Heights Behavioral Health, a 92-bed hospital, will close by the end of March. The facility will lay off all 158 of its staff.
- Suncoast Mental Health Center will close its four locations on Florida’s Treasure Coast. CEO Debra Engle said the decision to shutter the facilities was “due to financial challenges.”
- Evanston, Ill.-based Endeavor Health is eliminating inpatient psychiatric services at Northwest Community Hospital in Arlington Heights, Ill. The move will affect about 100 behavioral health employees, who may transition to other roles in the organization.
- Coral Gables, Fla.-based Acorn Health closed one location and consolidated four others. The ABA therapy provider also laid off fewer than 25 employees as part of a reorganization.
At least one planned hospital closure has been called off in 2025. In February, Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey halted the closures of Pappas Rehabilitation Hospital for Children and Pocasset Mental Health Center, pending further review and consideration from community stakeholders.
This story was last updated May 20.