In a statement submitted to the Senate Finance Committee today for a hearing on protecting children’s mental health, the AHA urged Congress to lift the caps on physician residency positions and increase scholarships, loan forgiveness and other financial supports to encourage health care providers to specialize in behavioral health services. AHA also called for robust funding for the National Health Service Corps, nursing workforce development and other programs to build and support diversity in the behavioral health workforce; vigorous enforcement of mental health parity laws; and funding to help identify patients at high risk for suicide, facilitate suicide prevention training at health professions schools, and support culturally competent trauma and mental health services in communities affected by violence.

Related News Articles

Headline
The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists April 17 released guidance recommending a new approach to prenatal care delivery. The guidance calls…
Headline
The National Institutes of Health April 7 released a study that found twins — smaller at birth on average than singletons — develop slower in early pregnancy…
Headline
A National Institutes of Health study published April 2 found that blood pressure patterns observed during the first half of pregnancy can determine a woman's…
Headline
The U.S. birth rate fell 2% in 2023 to about 3.6 million, according to final data released March 18 by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The…
Headline
A new initiative launched March 18 by the Dr. Lorna Breen Heroes' Foundation seeks to improve mental health care access for health care workers. The program,…
Headline
A study published Feb. 26 by JAMA Psychiatry found that female physicians died by suicide at more than 1.5 times the rate of female nonphysicians from 2017-…