Blog post: Crisis Text Line and the Steve Fund partner up

Share on facebook
Share on twitter
Share on linkedin
Share on email
The Steve Fund and Crisis Text Line bring complementary services and expertise to help the mental and emotional well-being of young people of color.

Crisis Text Line and the Steve Fund partner to help young people of color

By Melinda Blaise

According to the National Alliance on Mental Illness, 1 in 5 young people ages 13 to 18 have or will have a mental illness at some point. But people of color are less likely to seek help.  African-Americans and Hispanics use mental health services at about half the rate of whites and Asian-Americans at about a third the rate, says the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, 2010. There  is a major disparity here.

News broke last week about rapper and actor Kid Cudi checking himself into rehab for depression and suicidal urges. In a message on his Facebook page he says, “loneliness is a terrible thing. And if you don’t know how to conquer it. It can eat you alive.”
cudi-facebook

Kid Cudi’s story shines a light on the largely hidden but urgent issue of mental illness of young people of color. More often than not, young people of color do not seek care for mental illness or they wait until they are in crisis to do so. This is often due to insufficient access to care, stigma surrounding mental health or lack of support. The Center for Disease Control says that “more than 1 out of 20 Americans 12 years and older has reported suffering from depression. Crisis Text Line and the Steve Fund recognize a need to support these groups of individuals by partnering together to serve young people of color by bringing the strongest aspects of our skill sets together.

With people of color forming the majority of all Americans by 2044 (and of children by 2020), the future success of our nation will depend on the mental health and emotional well-being of all student populations, and on colleges and universities providing appropriate support.

The Steve Fund is the nation’s only organization focused on the mental health and emotional well-being of students of color. Crisis Text Line is the nation’s only free, nationwide, 24/7 text line for people in crisis. Together, it’s a perfect match.

The Steve Fund and Crisis Text Line bring complementary services and expertise to help the mental and emotional well-being of young people of color. While Crisis Text Line supplies the free, 24/7 crisis support, the Steve Fund brings research on young people of color, strategic partnerships with colleges and universities, nonprofits, to increase the number of people reached, access to mental health experts and programming expertise to support the content and platform, and a whole suite of knowledge products to inform the sector.

Over the next year, with the support of Knight Foundation, we will be working to improve how we engage this community to create a space for young people of color to seek out mental health support as well as to volunteer to support these groups.

Please visit Crisis Text Line at crisistextline.org/volunteer/ to volunteer or text us at 741741 if you are or anyone you know is in crisis. Young people of color in crisis can text STEVE to 741741 to be connect with a live, trained Crisis Counselor.

Download the Equity In Mental Health Framework

Download the Equity In Mental Health Framework

A Framework of Recommendations for Colleges and Universities to Support the Mental Health of Students of Color. Now with toolkit.

About The Steve Fund

The Steve Fund is dedicated to the mental health and emotional well-being of students of color. Right at this moment, there are students of color who are failing academically, suffering emotionally and/OR in some cases are facing serious risk, because population-specific factors influencing mental health are too poorly understood and not acted upon. We are taking action. Learn more.

Follow Us Online

Text STEVE to 741741

Latest Updates

Are you a young person of color? Feeling down, stressed or overwhelmed? Text STEVE to 741741 and a live, trained Crisis Counselor will receive the text and respond to you quickly to provide support. The volunteer Crisis Counselor will help you move from a hot moment to a cool moment. 
Share this resource and learn more.

Unapologetically Free

Unapologetically Free Centering Mental Health on Black College Campuses  Together with the United Negro College Fund and Thurgood Marshall College Fund, the Steve Fund is partnering with Black colleges and

People have often wondered why Black History Month is in February, the shortest month of the year. Apparently, this month was chosen in honor of Frederick Douglass, whose birthday is

People have often wondered why Black History Month is in February, the shortest month of the year. Apparently, this month was chosen in honor of Frederick Douglass, whose birthday is

Follow The Steve Fund Online

Our Mission: Promoting the mental health and emotional well-being of young people of color