Mental Health
for Young People

We believe in the extraordinary power of today’s youth and know that supporting their mental health and wellbeing is critical to unlocking their full potential.

We work to equip young people and their caregivers with resources to address the challenges of adolescence, with a special focus on the mental health needs of young people of color and LGBTQ+ youth.

A teenage girl lying down in bed, looking at her phone under the covers

Photo by Miodrag Ignjatovic/Getty Images

Featured Partner

  • JED Foundation

    The Jed Foundation (JED) helps schools and young people prioritize mental health.

    Schools are one of the best places to reach young people in need of support. JED partners with young adults, educators, caregivers, and communities to prevent suicide, improve student mental health, and help young people thrive.
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    Two women interact with the audience at a conference on student mental health.

    Courtesy of the JED Foundation

  • The Center for Digital Thriving

    The Center for Digital Thriving helps people thrive in a tech-filled world.

    The Center for Digital Thriving conducts research and creates resources to help young people, parents, and educators navigate life in a tech-filled world. Their tools help manage everything from doom-scrolling and thinking traps to FOMO and tech habits.
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    Three girls lying on a bed side-by-side taking a selfie together

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  • Young Futures

    Young Futures is making the digital world an easier place to grow up.

    Many parents and teens are worried about the impact of technology on mental health. Young Futures funds and champions an ecosystem of solutions to help them navigate an increasingly digital world.
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    Four young adult women posing to take a selfie together

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  • YR Media

    YR Media is amplifying the voices of the next generation.

    YR Media provides training, paid opportunities, and a robust multimedia platform for young, primarily BIPOC content creators to tell the stories that matter most to their generation, including those about mental health and wellbeing.
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    A teenager at SXSW recording with a professional camera and microphone

    Katie Hayes Luke for Pivotal Ventures

  • The Trevor Project

    The Trevor Project centers the lived experiences of LGBTQ+ young people.

    Grounded in the belief that LGBTQ+ young people deserve to be heard, valued, and celebrated, The Trevor Project offers 24/7 crisis care, long-term support, and identity-affirming community for LGBTQ+ youth all year round.
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    A diverse group of teenagers gathering for a photo together

    Courtesy of The Trevor Project

  • Inseparable

    Inseparable is on a mission to improve mental health care in the United States.

    Inseparable works to increase the availability and affordability of quality care through better mental health care policies. To reach young people in need of care, they launched the Hopeful Futures Campaign to improve school mental health services.
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    A young woman hiding her smile in a conversation.

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  • AAKOMA Project

    The AAKOMA Project advocates for more equitable mental health care.

    Youth of color face a number of challenges finding mental health care that reflects their needs and experiences. The AAKOMA Project is working toward a world in which they, and all young people, can get the mental health support that they need.
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    The founder of a youth mental health organization listening to another person speak in a panel interview

    Courtesy of the AAKOMA Project

Solutions We Support

Young people deserve better than our outdated mental health care system. We’re working with our partners to create next-generation mental health care that catches up to this generation’s needs.

Reaching Youth of All Identities

For mental health care to meet young people’s needs, it first needs to understand who they are. Our approach centers young people’s own voices and experiences—especially those of LGBTQ+ youth and youth of color—to help ensure they have access to services and solutions that are culturally relevant.

Young people of color and LGBTQ+ youth face some of the highest barriers to getting mental health support.

60% of patients of color say that having a health care professional who shares or understands their culture is important, but only 14% of mental health providers are non-white. Our partner AAKOMA Project Inc. is working to increase access to culturally competent care for young people of color and reduce stigma around talking about mental health in their communities.

Being treated with respect and empathy can have significant positive effects for young people’s mental wellbeing. For instance, LGBTQ+ youth who can use their chosen name and pronouns reported 71% fewer depressive symptoms, according to the Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry. Our partner The Trevor Project offers counseling to LGBTQ+ young people 24/7/365 to ensure they can get the identity-affirming support they need, when they need it.

A young female audience member speaks into a microphone at an event

Photo by Anderson Coelho/Getty Images

Improving Access to Care

We work with organizations that are making mental health care services more accessible for young people and their families. Young people in need of support should know where and how to get it.

The mental health care system in the U.S. was built on the assumption that only a small number of adolescents would need to use it. As a result, it leaves millions of young people behind.

Our partners make high-quality care available and affordable to everyone, especially marginalized youth. For example, Headstream Innovation’s tech accelerator helps innovators create cutting-edge mental health solutions and deliver them to young people at scale. From reimagining high school health class to creating peer support networks to reach young people in times of need, these startups are transforming the way mental health care is received and delivered.

A young woman sits on a couch with her arm around her mother

Photo by Malandrino/Getty Images

Reaching Youth at School

Schools are one of the best places to reach young people in need of mental health support. The challenge is ensuring that more students have access to the kind of high-quality school-based mental health care that can help them thrive.

Our partner Inseparable’s 2022 School Mental Health Report Card found that 61% of public schools report insufficient mental health staff to manage caseloads. Inseparable helps state and federal systems implement better mental health policies for students in need.


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A young woman sitting and talking to a group of teenagers at an event

Photo by Al Bello/Getty Images

Fostering Healthier Digital Lives

Young people today have a different relationship with technology than any generation before them. We support organizations developing evidence-backed solutions that help them thrive in a digital world.

Growing up can be hard, and both young people and their families need practical resources and tools that can help them navigate the ups and downs of digital life.

Our partner, the Center for Digital Thriving, develops lesson plans and other resources that help youth flourish in a tech-filled world. Another one of our partners, Young Futures, funds innovative strategies to promote social connection, teen belonging, and wellbeing in the digital age.

Three teenagers using their phones while talking at a sleepover

Photo by Klaus Vedfelt/Getty Images

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