Each year on March 2 we observe World Teen Mental Wellness Day, which aims to raise awareness and destigmatize mental health issues experienced by teenagers, and to expand the conversation around available resources. There is an ongoing mental health and substance use crisis in our country. Families everywhere experience difficult and challenging experiences as their loved ones are cycled in and out of a system dealing with workforce shortages and resource issues. HMA works extensively to address the opportunities and challenges inherent in our struggling behavioral health system, including substance use disorder and on child welfare and family resilience programs throughout the country. #WorldTeenMentalWellnessDay
One such program is Lifting Voices, an independent initiative developed by Heidi Arthur and Ellen Breslin, both HMA Principals, who co-founded the initiative, informed by their own family members’ experience and by their expertise in behavioral health policy and practice. As parents of children who nearly died on multiple occasions from severe behavioral health conditions, the co-founders are driven to inform the transformation of the youth behavioral healthcare system. As behavioral health professionals who found themselves struggling to navigate the many challenges facing their own children, they realized that their knowledge, desperation, and resources afforded their children access to interventions that should be available to every child and youth in need of services. Their experience of the care delivery system has also inspired their commitment to highlight the urgent improvements necessary to support struggling children and parents affected by the nation’s youth behavioral health crisis.
The co-founders published the initial Lifting Voices report in October 2023. Since then, the team has engaged multiple youth and family collaborators and state and national partners. They presented the report and their ongoing efforts at national and state conferences.
They developed a second iteration of the surveys and a website to scale the dissemination effort, with collaborators, Kelsey Engelbracht who developed the website and Sheilah Gauch who helped to develop the survey.
“We felt an imperative to lift the voices of youth and families experiencing mental health and substance use conditions,” says co-founder, Ellen Breslin.
Heidi Arthur added, “So far we’ve received just over 100 survey responses. As we reach each 100-response milestone we plan to collaborate with our network of youth and family advisors to distill key findings that we can share in order to inform improvements to the system.” They plan to release the first report in May 2025.
In February 2025, the team was invited by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) Office of Recovery to participate in workgroups providing input into a toolkit for family and caregivers and to further define and describe SAMHSA’s framework of community-based recovery supports.
You can join national organizations and state agencies in disseminating the secure, anonymous Lifting Voices surveys by simply sharing the Lifting Voices | transform behavioral health link and inviting families and youth to participate.
Findings will be disseminated with the goal of sharing the experience that youth/young adults and parents/caregivers are having as they seek services for child and youth mental health and/or substance use.
To learn more about this project, or inquire about ways that HMA can help with other behavioral health, child welfare, or substance use disorder issues, contact a member of our behavioral health team.