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Why Mental Health Screening and Therapy in Schools Help Kids—Not Harm Them

September 14, 2025
By Third Horizon

This week, The Washington Post published an opinion piece suggesting that school-based mental health screening “endangers kids” and that therapy doesn’t help students at risk. After 25+ years working in behavioral health and health care policy, I can say with confidence: the evidence tells a very different story.

Screening Saves Lives

Therapy and Early Intervention Help At-Risk Youth

Meta-analyses of school-based programs confirm these benefits more broadly. Reviews of CBT and DBT-A in schools highlight that outcomes are strongest when trained clinicians deliver programs and actively involve parents and families in treatment planning. A recent overview in Frontiers in Psychology found consistent positive effects on youth depression and anxiety across dozens of school-based trials.

Addressing Substance Use Early

Mental health screening also creates opportunities to identify and address substance use—a major risk factor for later mental health disorders and suicide. Programs like SBIRT (Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment)have been shown to reduce adolescent alcohol and drug misuse in school and clinical settings. More recently, experts emphasized that early screening for adolescent substance use helps prevent escalation into serious disorders and promotes health equity.

Safer Schools Through Early Intervention

The need for these programs feels particularly urgent given the tragic shooting this week at Evergreen High School in Colorado, where a 16-year-old student shot two classmates before dying by suicide. Authorities reported that locked doors and rapid staff action prevented even greater harm.

Research by the U.S. Secret Service and Department of Education shows that most school shooters exhibit warning signs—mental health struggles, suicidal thoughts, substance use—before violence occurs. School-based screening and threat assessment programs are proven tools to identify those red flags and connect students to help.

But early identification only works if it’s paired with reasonable gun safety policies for children and families. For example, a recent RAND analysis found that states with strong child access prevention and safe storage laws have lower rates of unintentional firearm injuries, suicides, and deaths among children. Preventing school shootings requires a comprehensive approach: addressing both mental health and access to firearms.

Schools as Partners, Not Substitutes

Schools don’t replace parents or doctors—they extend the safety net. With the right training and safeguards, they can:

Colorado’s I Matter program is a strong example: providing free therapy sessions for youth through schools and community outreach so cost and access aren’t barriers—and early indicators show it’s having real positive effect. Since launching in late 2021, over 13,000 youth across 62 counties have received care via I Matter, with more than 50,000 therapy sessions delivered, and 80 percent of participants being referred into additional behavioral health services.

The Bigger Picture

From my decades in this field, I know that parental support, stable home environments, and good nutrition are essential for children’s well-being. But they do not replace preventive screening, early intervention, or substance use prevention—they complement them.

When we delay asking questions, fail to screen, or leave signs unheeded, the consequences can be devastating. The Evergreen tragedy should be a call to action—not a reason to retreat.

That’s why the claim that school screening “endangers kids” is misleading and dangerous. The evidence is clear: thoughtful screening, early intervention, and access to therapy save lives. Dismissing these tools ignores decades of research—and puts students at greater risk.

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