The Tac Blog
Access: The TAC Blog
Leading experts report from the intersection of affordable housing, health care, and human services policy.
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- Affordable Housing Planning
- Behavioral Health Financing
- Bevahioral Health Crisis Response
- Care Integration
- Chronic Homelessness
- Community Engagement
- Continuum of Care
- Disaster Prep/Recovery
- Equity-Focused Data/QI
- Equity-Focused Systems Redesign
- HOPWA
- Housing-Related Supports
- Integrated Housing
- Lived Experience/Expertise
- Long-Term Services/Supports
- Managed Care
- Mental Illness
- Olmstead
- Permanent Supportive Housing
- Rapid Rehousing
- Rental Assistance
- Substance Use Disorders
- Supported Employment
- Systems of Care
- Veteran Housing/Services
- Youth Homelessness
- January 14, 2020
Health and Housing – A Peer-to-Peer Learning Opportunity for Health Care Leaders
Affordable Housing | Mental Health & Substance Use | Blog PostWith innovative local partnerships, hospitals can increase access to affordable housing and supportive services for vulnerable patient populations. TAC brought interested institutions together to learn both from subject matter experts and from each other.
- January 7, 2020
How Youth Action Boards (YABs) are Partnering with Communities to End Youth Homelessness
Homelessness | Blog PostWhat happens when young people with lived experience bring their expertise and creativity to their communities' efforts to end youth homelessness? We asked Youth Action Boards across the U.S. how they are "making it work." Here's what they said.
- October 2, 2019
News, Resources, & Happenings at TAC – October 2019
Affordable Housing | Mental Health & Substance Use | Blog PostAn international mental health leadership exchange and a learning collaborative on housing and hospitals both offer valuable opportunities for peer-to-peer education.
- September 4, 2019
Olmstead at 20 — Using the Vision of Olmstead to Decriminalize Mental Illness
Olmstead & Community Integration | Blog PostThanks to the 1999 Olmstead decision, more people with mental illness now live in integrated, community-based settings instead of psychiatric hospitals or nursing homes. Yet for the many who who continue to be unnecessarily incarcerated, the promise remains unfulfilled.