The SOUND Mobile Rapid Response Crisis Teams are specially equipped two-person units, traveling in vans, staffed by behavioral health professionals and certified peer counselors. They are designed to de-escalate mental health and substance use crises, provide immediate support, and connect individuals to long-term care.
Watch videoAt SOUND, we provide mental-health support that centers your voice and your goals. Our Individual, Group, and Family Mental-Health Treatment services are designed to help you feel understood, supported, and empowered as you navigate whatever you’re experiencing, whether it stems from stress, trauma, or something that’s been impacting your wellbeing for a while. We walk with you at every step, listening carefully and tailoring care to what matters most to you.
You can access care in ways that feel right for you, including one-on-one sessions, family support, or group connections where you can connect with others who are navigating similar experiences. Our approach is humanistic and holistic, blending evidence-based practices with compassion and respect for your lived experience. Together, we can explore the types of support that best meet your needs, including assessments, counseling, trauma-related services, medication support and monitoring, nursing care, peer support, crisis assistance, care coordination, and help with employment assistance when needed.
We are here to help you and your family feel safe, seen, heard, and genuinely understood. Your care plan will be shaped by your needs, strengths, and goals, with a focus on supporting stability, resilience, confidence, and the skills you need to live a life guided by your own values and aspirations.
To make an appointment, give us a call at 206-901-2000.
A Certified Community Behavioral Health Clinic (CCBHC) is an integrated model of care designed to ensure access to coordinated and comprehensive behavioral healthcare for everyone, regardless of ability to pay, residence, age or diagnosis. CCBHCs continue to close the treatment gap that leaves millions of people in the US unable to access lifesaving mental health and substance use care.