To: State, territorial, tribal, and local policymakers and administrators of systems, agencies, and programs responsible for children, youth, and family health and well-being
Dear Colleagues,
Thank you for the work you do each day to support children, youth, and families across the country. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF) would like to highlight the critical importance of timely, high-quality behavioral health crisis care and make sure you are aware of how these resources can be accessed in your communities.
Too many people are experiencing suicidal crisis or mental health-related distress without the support and care they need, and this is particularly true for children, youth, and families. Trends in suicide attempts and deaths by suicide have been increasing among adolescents and remain a major public health concern. In 2023, 3.2 million adolescents aged 12 to 17 (12.3 percent) had serious thoughts of suicide in the past year, 1.5 million (5.6 percent) made suicide plans, and 856,000 (3.3 percent) attempted suicide. Vulnerable adolescent populations exposed to adverse childhood experiences are at particular risk of suicide and related behaviors.
Someone to contact: The 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline
988 offers one-on-one, skilled, compassionate mental health and substance use support for anyone at any time. 988 counselors are trained to understand how an issue is affecting a person and share resources that may be helpful. People can call or text 988 or chat 988lifeline.org 24/7 for themselves or if they are worried about a loved one.
The 988 dialing code is made up of a national network of more than 200 local crisis contact centers
that are equipped to handle thousands of contacts each day. When someone calls 988, they first hear a greeting message. They are then given choices of who to connect with. The 988 Lifeline has specially trained counselors for veterans, Spanish speakers, LGBTQI+ youth and young adults, and Deaf and Hard of Hearing people. The 988 Lifeline uses Language Line Solutions to provide translations to callers in more than 240 additional languages, and is also working to ensure broad accessibility to make sure that all people can receive needed support, including those with intellectual and/or developmental disabilities, those with brain injury, and those with other disabilities. Since Congress designated 988 in 2020 and the three-digit number went live in 2022, there has been a significant investment of federal resources to scale up crisis centers across the country. 988 is an important step forward and offers an unprecedented opportunity to strengthen and transform behavioral health crisis care in our country.
There are a number of other federally funded hotlines that offer critical support and intersect with topics related to emotional distress and crisis. Use your best judgment as to the most appropriate resource for the situation when directing the public to different hotline resources. For your convenience, a list of ACF- and select federally supported hotlines is included at the bottom of this letter (see Tables A, B). When suicide presents as a risk, please refer to 988. 911 should only be used for situations posing immediate physical danger, such as suicide attempts in progress, medical emergencies, or immediate threats to safety.
Someone to respond and a safe place to go: The importance of trained face-to-face response
The vast majority of those seeking help from the 988 Lifeline do not require any additional emergency interventions at that moment. However, there are instances when an in-person response is needed. The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) outlines two core components that every community should work to have in place when these instances arise: mobile crisis teams that can reach individuals where they are in the community, and crisis stabilization facilities that can provide observation and stabilization services in a