Teacher-delivered mental health prevention and intervention programs offer an opportunity to integrate mental health support meaningfully into students’ everyday lives, as well as expand the reach and impact of mental health services. This is particularly important given the lack of highly trained mental health providers and the barriers to accessing clinical services. However, teachers are not trained as mental health providers and serve a primarily educational mission, and therefore, there are unique considerations for conceptualizing teachers as individuals who can deliver mental health prevention and intervention programs. The purpose of this paper is to delineate conceptual and practical issues related to utilizing teachers as non-traditional mental health providers including key opportunities and challenges to teacher-delivered mental health interventions. We present four examples of teacher-delivered programs that aim to support student mental health and well-being and use these example programs to illustrate these key opportunities and challenges. We also outline directions for future research, with the ultimate goal of enhancing teachers’ skills and improving youth mental health.
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