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ACF’s Commitment to Behavioral Health

Metadata Updated: September 8, 2025

En Español (PDF)

Supporting the behavioral health of children, families, and youth is an essential priority for the Administration for Children and Families (ACF). We see youth and families facing mental health challenges, substance use struggles, and high levels of stress. In partnership with federal, state, tribal, territorial, and local partners, as well as youth and families themselves, we have — through prioritizing actions and investments — further integrated behavioral health support and services

into existing supports for youth and families. This enables us to promote behavioral health, foster recovery, cultivate resilience, and strengthen overall well-being among individuals and communities across the country.

I’m proud of the work ACF has done — and will continue to do — in partnership with all of you to address the President’s Strategy to Address our National Mental Health Crisis

and the HHS Roadmap for Behavioral Health Integration

. I’d like to highlight in this email some of our work and accomplishments to improve behavioral health for children, youth, and families.

ACF is committed to centering and partnering with youth, families, and communities and learning from their experiences and expertise as we transform behavioral health in this country. The ACF team and I have regularly listened to, engaged with, and co-developed several behavioral health resources. These engagements have informed behavioral health activities, policy, and communications to better reach and serve children, youth, parents, and caregivers.

A few examples of ACF’s engagements include:

As part of this commitment, we recently launched our ACF and Behavioral Health webpage to expand access to resources for communities, parents and caregivers, teens and young adults, tribes, grantees, and service providers. Included online are resources to support the prevention, treatment, and recovery from behavioral health conditions; recognize, manage, and support children’s mental health needs; and address substance use during pregnancy. We have also dedicated a webpage specifically for early childhood behavioral health resources.

I encourage you to share these resources within your networks and to note that near the top center of the webpage is a tool to translate the information into a variety of languages; ACF is committed to promoting language access. In the coming months, we will be making additional changes and adding new resources, including several Spanish language resources.

We are working with partners across the federal government to increase access to culturally and linguistically relevant support for youth and families served by ACF programs.

A few examples of ACF’s efforts to improve access to culturally and linguistically relevant resources include:

ACF has been a partner in launching the first-ever HHS Children and Youth Resilience Challenge

, which is investing in innovative, community-led solutions to advance the mental health of children and youth. Later this month, ACF will be announcing finalists for Phase 1 of the Challenge to support the mental health of children.

Last year, we partnered with Instituto del Desarrollo de la Juventud

and the U.S. Census Bureau to develop new solutions to enhance children’s resilience to adversity in Puerto Rico

(PDF). The collaborative process led by The Opportunity Project brought together youth, tech, academic, and community partners to address the challenge by building public-facing products informed by open federal data.

ACF values and welcomes your partnership to support behavioral health of children, youth, and families. We are in this work together.

With thanks for your leadership,

January Contreras

Assistant Secretary

Metadata-only record linking to the original dataset. Open original dataset below.

Access & Use Information

Public: This dataset is intended for public access and use. License: No license information was provided. If this work was prepared by an officer or employee of the United States government as part of that person's official duties it is considered a U.S. Government Work.

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Dates

Metadata Created Date September 6, 2025
Metadata Updated Date September 8, 2025

Metadata Source

Harvested from Healthdata.gov

Additional Metadata

Resource Type Dataset
Metadata Created Date September 6, 2025
Metadata Updated Date September 8, 2025
Publisher Administration for Children and Families
Maintainer
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Data First Published 2025-09-03
Data Last Modified 2025-09-06
Category ACF
Public Access Level public
Bureau Code 009:70
Metadata Context https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema/catalog.jsonld
Metadata Catalog ID https://healthdata.gov/data.json
Schema Version https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema
Catalog Describedby https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema/catalog.json
Harvest Object Id 93d041d9-4435-4446-909c-db5314bda8a7
Harvest Source Id 651e43b2-321c-4e4c-b86a-835cfc342cb0
Harvest Source Title Healthdata.gov
Homepage URL https://healthdata.gov/d/dyyf-n7bk
Program Code 009:045
Source Datajson Identifier True
Source Hash aba69dddd7b12e3670a25bc91457b0f1305739b6483ae5de569aeee65af5dc59
Source Schema Version 1.1

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