Mental Health Services for Students Act of 2025
Impact on your practice
If passed, could increase demand for school-based mental health services and create new referral relationships, but the bill is early-stage and details are limited. Therapists should monitor for provisions that affect scope of practice in educational settings or payment for services.
Key facts
Addresses mental health service delivery in K-12 schools
Referred to House Energy and Commerce Committee
Likely focuses on expanding school counselor/therapist roles or funding
Could affect private practice referral patterns from schools
No clear path to passage as early-stage committee bill
Policy changes drive denial patterns
Therapy Companion tracks both: the policy shifts on this page and the denial patterns hitting your claims.
Related policy changes
2 healthcare workforce lobbying pushes to watch
This tax credit targets therapists and other clinicians in underserved areas, potentially improving recruitment and retention in rural/low-income regions. Mental health providers would benefit, though eligibility depends on facility type and geographic designation.
Fiscal Year (FY) 2026 Notice of Supplemental Funding Opportunity
This funding opportunity supports workforce development in the prevention space, which expands the behavioral health ecosystem but is not directly relevant to practicing therapists' billing, licensing, or reimbursement. It may indirectly affect job opportunities and referral networks in the prevention sector.
2024 National Rural Health Day: Empowering Rural Resilience
This is a SAMHSA initiative highlighting rural mental health workforce development and equity, but it doesn't establish new policy or funding mechanisms. Rural therapists may benefit from increased visibility and workforce retention resources.
The pediatric behavioral health gap we can’t staff our way out of
This highlights a systemic pediatric mental health workforce crisis. Therapists cannot be hired fast enough to meet demand. The commentary suggests hybrid human-AI support models may be necessary—signaling potential shifts in how therapy delivery is structured and reimbursed.