loader image
Thursday, January 8, 2026
72.2 F
McAllen
- Advertisement -

Texas HHS Awarded National Suicide Prevention Lifeline Grant

Translate to Spanish or other 102 languages!

$3M Grant Will Connect Texans to Lifesaving Help

Mega Doctor News

- Advertisement -

AUSTIN – Texas Health and Human Services is receiving a two-year grant of over $3 million from the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline’s State Capacity Building Initiative. The grant will increase the state’s capacity to provide free, confidential, emotional support and services to people in suicidal crisis or emotional distress.

“The National Suicide Prevention Lifeline grant will create more opportunities to offer hope, help, and healing to Texans in need of critical services,” said Sonja Gaines, HHS deputy executive commissioner of Intellectual and Developmental Disability and Behavioral Health Services. “This grant provides Texans across the state with access to local support and resources needed to ensure those in an emotional crisis get the help they need.”

The purpose of this grant is to assist Texas call centers in answering more calls from residents, reducing wait times and connecting them to local treatment facilities, support and nearby crisis or emergency service centers.

- Advertisement -

“These funds will further help our efforts throughout Texas in preventing suicides and also encouraging hope. I thank all those who are working valiantly alongside HHSC in curbing suicides among our youth and adults, including our veteran servicemen and women,” said Rep. Four Price.

Throughout the two years of this Lifeline grant, Texas Health and Human Services will receive more than $1.5 million each year to raise the in-state answer rate for Lifeline calls to 70 percent from a current in-state answer rate of approximately 31 percent. Currently, Texans who call into the Lifeline can be routed to different back-up call centers which may be out of state. This can result in individuals or families not receiving efficient routing to local treatment, support and longer wait times.

“Suicide is a concern for large and small communities across Texas and the nation. We are very thankful that this funding helps our efforts to assist with local suicidal calls,” said Mark Ware, senior director of crisis services of My Health My Resources of Tarrant County. “With the Lifeline Grant, our employees are able to connect callers in our community with local resources to help with immediate needs and effectively impact suicide rates across Texas.”

To help Texans receive access to local resources, Texas HHS will contract with four local mental health authorities to implement the grant in March 2020: The Harris Center for Mental Health and IDD, Integral Care (Travis County), MHMR of Tarrant County and Emergence Health Network (El Paso County).

- Advertisement -

For more information on accessing behavioral health services in Texas, please visit https://mentalhealthtx.org/. For people in a crisis and concerned family members, please call the Lifeline at 800-273-8255 (800-273-TALK).

To learn more about suicide prevention and crisis centers, visit the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline website and the HHS Suicide Prevention page.

- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -

- Advertisement -

More Articles

No-Cost COVID-19 Testing Ends January 31st

The Hidalgo County Health & Human Services Department announces that no-cost COVID-19 testing at the Hidalgo County Public Health Laboratory will conclude on January 31, 2026.

DHR Health Celebrates 100th ECMO Patient

Driven by its mission to heal even the most critically ill patients across the Rio Grande Valley, DHR Health recently provided extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) to its 100th patient since the program’s inception in 2023. ECMO is medicine’s most sophisticated life support system that can save lives even when a ventilator and strong medications cannot.

Millions React Online as Health Insurance Costs Rise After ACA Subsidy Expiration

Millions of Americans are expressing anger, fear, and confusion on social media after learning that enhanced Affordable Care Act premium subsidies expired at the end of 2025, leading to higher monthly health insurance costs in 2026. While the ACA itself remains in place, the loss of temporary financial assistance has changed what many people now pay for coverage.

South Texas Health System Welcomes Arrival of First Baby Of 2026

Weighing 7 pounds, 12 ounces and measuring 20 inches in length, Little Samuel arrived at The Maternity Center at South Texas Health System Edinburg at 6:38 a.m., making him the first newborn delivered at an STHS facility in 2026.
- Advertisement -
×