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Sheppard Pratt at Ellicott City

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Sheppard Pratt at Ellicott City was a private psychiatric hospital located in Ellicott City, Maryland . It had a 20-bed adult unit, an 18-bed co-occurring disorders unit, an 18-bed crisis stabilization unit, a 22-bed adolescent unit, and an adult day hospital . The hospital was owned and operated by the Towson, Maryland based Sheppard Pratt Health System

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9-489: Prior to its purchase by Sheppard Pratt the facility was known as Taylor Manor , one of only a dozen privately owned psychiatric facilities in the nation. The hospital closed with the opening of Sheppard Pratt at Elkridge in 2020. Most of the original structures were already demolished prior to the campus closure, as new plans for the Taylor Highlands development were already underway. In 1907 Taylor Manor started as

18-476: A 33-bed homeless shelter on the campus while expanding their facilities at Atholton High School . In 1966, Taylor Manor started the first psychiatric treatment program in Maryland for adolescents. Dr. Irving Taylor collaborated with on-site research into the drug Thorazine becoming the first to use anti-psychotic medicine on patients. In 1983 Robert L Custer took gambling research from Ohio to Taylor Manor to create

27-643: A gambling addiction treatment center . He summarized that gambling addicts had a fear of dying and included a treatment plan that included repaying gambling debts. Sheppard Pratt at Elkridge Sheppard Pratt at Elkridge is a private psychiatric hospital under construction in Elkridge, Maryland . The hospital will serve as a replacement location for nearby Sheppard Pratt at Ellicott City . In December 2010, Sheppard Pratt Health System announced plans to move its 92-bed facility at Taylor Manor in Ellicott City to

36-462: A new location in Elkridge, Maryland. With its lease expiring at the end of 2018, the hospital began searching for a replacement location. A 40-acre parcel in located southwest of the junction of Interstate 95 and Maryland Route 100 was purchased for $ 9 million. The healthcare provider has cited the move as a way to expand access to its services to a larger population. Master plans have estimated that

45-421: A year on $ 15.8 million in revenues. In 2001 Taylor manor's programs were absorbed into the 1500 employee Sheppard Pratt system. Taylor Manor Hospital provided buildings on campus for several community and mental health services, including: Halfway Home group home from 2003-2018 for addictions, Our House for young men, Maryland Alternative Care for children, and in 2006 Grassroots crisis intervention center operated

54-719: The Howard County Sanitarium Company built on property along College Avenue and New Cut Road in Ellicott City owned by Dr. Rushmore White. The twenty person facility suffered a fire in 1923. In 1939 the facility was purchased by Issac H. Taylor and renamed Patapsco Manor and later renamed as the Pinel Clinic (after the French psychiatrist who took the chains off the patients in asylums outside Paris). Taylor operated an optometrist business and Taylor's Furniture on Main Street. In 1948

63-588: The facility expanded to 48 beds, and in 1968 it expanded to 151 beds. The modern architecture circular rotunda stands out at the center of campus. Operated by Dr. Irving J. Taylor (1919-2014), and later Dr. Bruce T. Taylor in 1979, who served as medical director and chief executive officer, Taylor Manor covered more than 65 acres (26 ha) in Ellicott City Maryland. The Ayrd library is named after Taylor Manor Hospital Psychiatric Award winner Frank J. Ayd, MD. In 1953 Dr. Irving Taylor and Taylor Manor Hospital

72-463: The first specialized treatment programs for adolescents and later for young adults, as well a unique crisis and respite program for adolescents. The area next to the campus property has been expanded and subdivided by the Taylor family as Taylor Village where sections were sold for housing. The campus acreage totaled 55 acres (22 ha) in 2000. By 2000, Taylor Manor had an operating loss of $ 1.1 million

81-413: Was the first hospital in the country to offer the first psychiatric specific medication, an anti-psychotic medication, Thorazine (chlorpromazine). Other treatments firsts in the area included offering many of the antidepressant and antianxiety drugs as they were developed in the mid-1950s, a dual diagnosis program for treatment of addictions and psychiatric illnesses, a compulsive gambling treatment program,

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