Mental Health
Protecting Youth Online: Insights and Actions for Communities, Policymakers, and Organizations
Protecting Youth Online: Insights and Actions for Communities, Policymakers, and Organizations
In order to attain total health, we must normalize a “whole person” approach that prioritizes mental and physical health equally. To do so, we are working strategically with employers, as they are uniquely positioned to reach employees, their families, and the surrounding communities, and can help them access evidence-based, innovative, inclusive prevention, treatment, and recovery resources to address mental health issues and addiction.
The three focus areas for our mental health work are 1) access to mental health services and resources, 2) innovation in scalable health technologies, and 3) investment in policy change (includes employers’ internal policies).
Mental Health
Highlights
-
Thriving Beyond Service: Strategic Philanthropy for the Military-to-Civilian Transition
For many veterans and their families, the transition from military service to civilian life—the military-to-civilian transition (MCT)—can present practical, logistical, and emotional challenges that affect their ability to thrive post...Read Report
GA
-
Employer Action Exchange: Executive Reflections on Building Resilient Businesses Through Whole-Person Health Investments
Our Executive Insights series—part of the Milken Institute Employer Action Exchange—began in late 2023, capturing the voices of executives from various industries and sectors on the role employers of all sizes can play in investing in their...Read Report -
Protecting Youth Online: Insights and Actions for Communities, Policymakers, and Organizations
The United States is facing a youth mental health crisis. Forty-two percent of high school students reported experiencing persistent feelings of sadness, including 29 percent of boys, 57 percent of girls, and 69 percent of LGBTQ+ students...Read Report -
Employer Investments in Digital, Whole-Person Health for Substance Use Disorders
Employers seek to support their employees while normalizing a whole-person approach to substance use disorders (SUD). The response to addiction and the opioid crisis requires a whole-of-society approach, including employers of all sizes...Read Report -
Advancing Innovative Treatments for Mental Health Care
More than 50% of Americans will be diagnosed with a mental health condition at some point in their lifetime. There is a tremendous gap between the number of Americans struggling with a mental health condition and those who seek and are able...Read Report
-
Racial Equity and Mental Health in the Workplace: Actions to Drive Systems Change
Nationwide protests in the summer of 2020 sparked many of the largest US corporations to pledge more than $200 billion to advance racial equity and confront the nation’s history of systemic racism. Nonprofits, government agencies, and...Read Report
JA
-
Final Recap: Leidos CEO Pledge Collaborative Action Group
In 2021, Leidos and the Milken Institute Center for Public Health (CPH) created a partnership to address two significant crises in our country: the growing addiction epidemic and the mental health crisis that has deepened since the global...Read Report -
Understanding and Identifying Gaps in Employer Mental Health Resources
About 60 million Americans live with mental health conditions, and nearly half of those go without treatment. The COVID-19 pandemic widened the gap between employers and employees on mental health in the workplace. In 2021, 80 percent of...Read Report
Featured Event Sessions
-
Digital Media and Youth Mental Health2024 Global Conference Session -
Caring for Our Caregivers: Burnout and the Health-Care Workforce2023 Future of Health Summit Session -
Revolutionizing Mental Health Care Through Innovation2023 Future of Health Summit Session
Examples of Past Projects
Building off the momentum of Leidos’ 2017 CEO Pledge, the Public Health team partnered with Leidos to create an Action Group of over 70 employers from across industries and sectors, committed to taking actionable steps to improve mental health and address the addiction crisis by examining internal programs, cultures, and internal policies. The efforts were aimed at focus areas including racial equity, stigma, raising awareness about the science of the disease of addiction, recovery-ready workplaces, and creating psychologically safe environments. Read more about this project.
In response to The Hartford’s Employer Research findings, as part of our employer programmatic portfolio, we formed a listening and discussion series focused on “Closing the Gap” between what addiction and mental health resources employers think they are providing to employees and what employees use in practice. These sessions focused on themes of psychological safety, stigma in the workplace, and performance and engagement at work.
The Public Health team has worked with the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) to address the demand for illicit drugs, understand the supply, and prevent addiction since 2017. Growing out of this long-standing relationship, in 2021, CPH was asked to collaborate with DEA as part of its larger Operation Engage initiative, focused on the employer component of a community-wide strategy to raise awareness about local drug threats. CPH held 11 regionally-based invite-only virtual convenings, during which employers had the opportunity to hear directly from their local DEA offices about the drug threats impacting their employees, their families, and by extension, their surrounding communities. In addition to raising awareness, these virtual events provided employers with free, evidence-informed drug prevention resources offered by organizations that specialize in evidence-based prevention. Read the final Reach and Impact Report summarizing this work.