Acadia Healthcare
Acadia Healthcare Company, Inc. runs behavioral health and addiction treatment facilities from Franklin, Tennessee, a suburb of Nashville. The company was founded in 2005 and now operates a nationwide network of inpatient psychiatric hospitals, residential treatment centers, and outpatient behavioral health clinics. It's one of the largest for-profit behavioral health providers in the United States, trading on NASDAQ under the ticker ACHC, with annual revenues exceeding two billion dollars. The company treats mental health disorders, substance use disorders, and co-occurring conditions across multiple states. Its Franklin headquarters reflects both where it started and how it's expanded throughout the healthcare sector in the early twenty-first century.
History
Joey Jacobs and other healthcare executives founded Acadia Healthcare in 2005 as a specialized operator of behavioral health facilities. The industry was consolidating rapidly at the time, and they saw an opportunity. The company's primary mission was acquiring and operating psychiatric hospitals and residential treatment centers, taking advantage of the market opportunity in aggregating independently operated behavioral health providers. During its early years, Acadia pursued aggressive acquisitions, purchasing existing facilities and developing new treatment centers in underserved markets. Franklin positioned the company within the greater Nashville metropolitan area, close to major medical centers, professional services, and transportation infrastructure.[1]
The company's growth took off in the 2010s. It expanded geographically and diversified its service offerings. Acadia went public on NASDAQ in 2011, providing capital for further expansion and allowing acquisitions of additional facilities across the United States. By 2015, the company operated more than 120 facilities in over 30 states. It'd become a major player in the behavioral health sector. During this period, the company also tried international operations, at one point running facilities in the United Kingdom before ultimately divesting those assets to concentrate on domestic business. But rapid expansion brought scrutiny. Regulators and the public raised questions about treatment standards, billing practices, and patient outcomes. Multiple investigations and lawsuits followed, leading to settlements with state attorneys general and federal regulators. Still, Acadia maintained its corporate presence in Franklin, where it employs corporate, clinical, and administrative staff across its headquarters.
In October 2025, Acadia announced closure of a series of facilities and laid off approximately 400 employees, reflecting cost-cutting measures amid declining financial performance and heightened legal exposure.[2] In December 2025, the company disclosed it was cutting 2025 adjusted earnings projections by approximately $49 million, attributing the revision in part to ongoing legal costs and operational pressures.[3] A major shift for a company that'd spent the prior decade in expansion mode.
Leadership
Acadia Healthcare's corporate leadership has shifted significantly since founding. Joey Jacobs, one of the principal founders, served in a leadership capacity during the formative acquisition phase that established Acadia as a major behavioral health operator. The board of directors and executive team have included individuals with backgrounds in healthcare management, finance, and operations, drawn from both within Tennessee and nationally.[4]
On January 20, 2026, Acadia appointed Debbie K. Osteen as Chief Executive Officer. She'd held this role before. The move came during a period of financial strain and heightened litigation, with Osteen's return viewed as an effort to provide experienced leadership during a challenging time.[5][6] Clinical leadership across Acadia's various facilities includes psychiatrists, psychologists, clinical social workers, and other mental health professionals who implement treatment protocols and manage patient care.
The company's involvement in behavioral health treatment has brought ongoing interaction with public health officials, mental health advocates, and regulatory bodies throughout Tennessee and at the federal level. Healthcare professionals specializing in behavioral medicine and addiction treatment work within Acadia facilities, contributing expertise to specialized mental health services. The regulatory and legislative environment surrounding behavioral health has also connected Acadia Healthcare with Tennessee state legislators, congressional representatives, and various state agencies concerned with healthcare quality, patient safety, and appropriate reimbursement practices.
Economy
Acadia Healthcare matters to the Nashville region as a major employer and healthcare services provider. It's one of the largest for-profit behavioral health companies in the United States, operating with annual revenues exceeding two billion dollars. The Franklin headquarters employs corporate staff in executive, financial, clinical leadership, and administrative positions, contributing to the local economy through direct employment and supporting additional jobs in related service industries. Healthcare employment in Middle Tennessee has grown consistently, and Acadia Healthcare has represented a notable portion of specialized psychiatric and behavioral health employment in the region. But the 2025 facility closures and associated layoffs of approximately 400 workers represent a contraction of that footprint.[7][8]
The behavioral health industry itself has experienced substantial growth due to increasing recognition of mental health needs, insurance coverage expansion, and integration of behavioral health into broader healthcare systems. Acadia's business model relies on operating inpatient psychiatric hospitals, residential treatment facilities for adolescents and adults, and outpatient clinics serving patients with severe mental illness, depression, anxiety disorders, and substance use disorders. The company contracts with insurance companies, government programs including Medicare and Medicaid, and private pay patients to generate revenue. Expansion of behavioral health services has created economic activity throughout Tennessee and the Southeast, including construction of new facilities, recruitment of clinical staff, and development of support services. But the company's reliance on insurance reimbursement and government program payments means that changes in healthcare policy and insurance practices directly affect its financial performance and operational strategy. The December 2025 downward revision of earnings projections by $49 million underscored this vulnerability to legal and policy headwinds.[9]
Facilities and Services
Acadia Healthcare operates a range of facility types designed to address varying levels of psychiatric and addiction treatment need. Inpatient psychiatric hospitals provide the most intensive care. Twenty-four-hour supervised care for individuals experiencing acute mental health crises, psychotic episodes, or severe substance use disorders requiring medical detoxification. Residential treatment centers offer structured, live-in therapeutic environments for patients who require ongoing support but whose conditions don't necessitate acute hospitalization. Partial hospitalization programs and intensive outpatient programs serve as intermediate levels of care, allowing patients to receive structured clinical programming during the day while returning home in the evenings. Outpatient behavioral health clinics offer less intensive ongoing care, including individual therapy, medication management, and group counseling.
Among Tennessee-area operations, Acadia has operated TrustPoint Hospital in Murfreesboro, a psychiatric facility serving the greater Nashville region. Inpatient psychiatric units across Acadia's network follow standard behavioral health protocols, including restrictions on personal electronic devices such as cell phones to maintain patient safety and therapeutic environment integrity. Facilities typically provide supervised access to phones and landlines at designated times to allow patients to maintain contact with family members and support systems. Patients admitted to inpatient psychiatric care are generally advised to bring personal hygiene items, comfortable clothing, and relevant medical documentation, as facilities maintain strict policies on permitted belongings.
Legal and Regulatory Matters
Acadia Healthcare has faced significant legal and regulatory scrutiny throughout its operating history. Challenges escalated in the mid-2020s. The company has been the subject of multiple investigations and lawsuits related to billing practices, patient safety standards, and the appropriateness of psychiatric hospitalization decisions at its facilities. Various state attorneys general and federal regulators have examined the company's operations, resulting in settlements and compliance agreements in several jurisdictions. The company's size and the sensitive nature of behavioral health treatment have made it a focus of both governmental oversight and patient advocacy organizations concerned with care quality and patient rights.
By late 2025, ongoing litigation had become a material financial concern. It contributed directly to the $49 million downward revision in adjusted earnings projections announced in December.[10] The facility closures and workforce reductions announced in October 2025 were understood in part as responses to this financial and legal pressure.[11] The reinstatement of a former CEO in January 2026 was widely interpreted as an effort to stabilize the organization during this period of compounded operational and legal difficulty.[12]
Education
Acadia Healthcare's operations involve extensive training and education for clinical and non-clinical staff employed across its facilities. The company maintains orientation and continuing education programs for psychiatrists, psychiatric nurses, clinical social workers, and other mental health professionals who provide direct patient care. These programs address clinical competencies, patient safety protocols, ethical practice standards, and evidence-based treatment approaches for various psychiatric and substance use disorders. Professional development opportunities within Acadia allow staff to pursue additional certifications and credentials in specialized areas such as addiction medicine, forensic psychiatry, and geriatric mental health. The company's facilities often serve as training sites for psychiatric residents, psychology interns, and social work students from universities and training programs throughout the Southeast, creating educational partnerships that benefit both student training and patient care delivery.[13]
Acadia Healthcare's involvement in the behavioral health field has also contributed to broader educational initiatives regarding mental health awareness, treatment-seeking behaviors, and recovery support. The company has participated in community education events, mental health literacy programs, and professional conferences that disseminate information about behavioral health treatment options and evidence-based therapeutic approaches. Staff members at Acadia Healthcare facilities have presented at regional and national conferences on topics related to psychiatric hospitalization, residential treatment, and community reintegration for individuals with serious mental illness. The company's role in the behavioral health sector has connected it to academic and training institutions that prepare future mental health professionals, building relationships with graduate programs in clinical psychology, social work, psychiatry, and counseling throughout Tennessee and neighboring states. These educational engagements support the development of qualified behavioral health professionals and contribute to the broader advancement of treatment practices and understanding of mental health conditions and recovery.