Mental health challenges in children, adolescents, and young adults are widespread, and have long been established as a detriment to students’ learning and success in school. Challenges today’s young people face are unprecedented and, in the words of the U.S. Surgeon General, uniquely hard to navigate. As 2021 came to a close, Vivek Murthy, MD advised our nation that the effect those challenges have had on students’ mental health has been devastating – both preceding, and then compounded by, the COVID-19 pandemic’s dramatic insults to young people's experiences at home, at school, and in the community. Importantly, Dr. Murthy has reminded us that mental health challenges in young people are both treatable, and often preventable. And our national health systems are recognizing the unique opportunity schools offer for access to and utilization of vital health care and mental health supports for children and adolescents.
In light of U.S. Surgeon General Murthy’s December 2021 advisory, Protecting Youth Mental Health, national lawmakers and executive leaders have recommended several key actions to strengthen and expand access to high-quality, comprehensive health care for America’s children. The U.S. Department of Health & Human Services [DHHS] has issued new guidance to remind states of their mandate to cover behavioral health services for children enrolled in Medicaid and CHIP, two complementary health care programs which, combined, cover more than half the nation’s K-12 students. DHHS Secretary Xavier Becerra and Education Secretary Miguel Cardona co-signed a July 2022 letter to governors calling on them to invest more in mental health services for children, and both long-standing options and relatively recent opportunities are available to states to strategically leverage Medicaid and CHIP reimbursements to provide, expand, strengthen and positively transform comprehensive mental health supports and treatment to address students’ needs.
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