Elevance Health Advances Efforts to Close Critical Gaps in Mental Health Care
By combining clinical programs, digital innovation and community partnerships, the company aims to improve wellbeing and reduce crises, ER visits and total cost of care for mental health
That’s why
With
“Mental health is health, and connecting people to the right care early can make all the difference in their health outcomes and cost,” said
Across its affiliated health plans and Carelon services,
Elevance Health Foundation’s community-based grants are also focused on simplifying the mental health journey through early engagement, proactive support, and continuity of care. By funding trusted organizations already embedded in local communities, this ensures people don’t fall through the cracks—especially before challenges escalate into crisis.
Community Investments Driving Early Intervention and Access
In the past year,
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Indiana :$3.4 million to organizations likeYouth First, Inc. , which provides access to mental health mentors for 107 rural, suburban, and urban schools across 13 counties, stretching fromEvansville to just south ofIndianapolis . Through this program 47,600Indiana youth have access to prevention and early intervention programs. -
Missouri :$273,553 to organizations like Shatterproof to address the stigma and discrimination in receiving addiction treatment and equips healthcare professionals to provide appropriate support to socially vulnerable communities. -
Georgia :$2.9 million to organizations like Sostento to ensure providers have tools to remove access barriers to mental health services through: 1,100 no-cost health access rides; 2,544 patient screenings, assessments, and referral options to get the treatment they need. -
California :$3.7 million to organizations likeRitter Center Behavioral Health , which launched a mobile behavioral health van to increase care coordination and harm reduction that will reach 3,617 individuals needing treatment inMarin County over 4 years. -
Nevada :$252,295 to organizations likeBoys & Girls Clubs of America’sYouth Mental Health Partnership , which offers prevention and intervention methodologies to strengthen youth emotional and mental wellness. -
New York :$4.6 million to organizations like NYU Langone Family Health Centers and thePrevention Education Partnership (PEP) to strengthen school-based overdose prevention through its PEP Talks program training 500 school staff, reaching 350 schools acrossNew York City , and expanding naloxone education, emergency response planning, and connections to behavioral health support for students and families. -
Ohio :$3.7 million to organizations likeSignature Health , which has expanded equitable access to care through Patient Navigators to foster trust and empowerment for people living with substance use disorders. -
Virginia :$3 million to organizations likeCommunities in Schools of theAppalachian Highlands , which provides individualized, targeted case management to over 5,500 students throughout a network of 115 schools acrossSouthwest Virginia .
“Through these actions, we’re moving beyond mental health awareness, making care easier to access, easier to understand, and easier to stay connected to,” said Agrawal. “Real progress means early intervention, trusted community partnerships and systems that break down silos for people who need care – for wherever they are in their mental health journey.”
As a long-time partner of
For more information on Elevance Health’s commitment to mental health and community-based support, visit www.elevancehealth.com.
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Tina.gaines@elevancehealth.com
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