Arizona Ranks 49th in Youth Mental Health. Here's What That Actually Means for Your Family.
The number is alarming. What's behind it is something families in Phoenix can actually do something about.
Dr. Shar Najafi-Piper, PhD | CEO & Founder, Roya Health | Integrated Behavioral Health for Children and Families
I want to start with a number that doesn't get nearly enough attention in Arizona: 49.
That's where our state ranks nationally in youth mental health. Out of 50. And before that lands as an abstraction, here is what it looks like in real terms: 24% of Arizona high school students have seriously considered suicide. That's higher than the national average, which is already too high. One in four kids in a classroom. Some of them in classrooms right here in Phoenix.
I didn't share this number to alarm you. I shared it because the families who come to us are often surprised by it, and I think they shouldn't be. Not because the situation is hopeless, but because understanding why Arizona is where it is helps families understand what to look for, what to ask for, and what actually changes outcomes.
49th: Arizona's national ranking in youth mental health, and 24% of Arizona high school students have seriously considered suicide, above the national average.
Why Arizona is where it is
The ranking isn't an accident. It's the result of several compounding factors that have been building for years.
Access is the first and most obvious one. Arizona has a documented shortage of child and adolescent clinicans, which means that even families who know what their child needs often can't get to it quickly. Waiting lists that stretch for months are not an anomaly here. They're standard. And in behavioral health, waiting is not neutral. Children who don't get help when they need it don't just pause their development until a slot opens. They continue to struggle, and the struggle compounds.
Fragmented care is the second factor, and in my experience it's the one that does the most quiet damage. Arizona has good individual providers. We have dedicated therapists, skilled pediatricians, and committed school counselors. What we have historically lacked is a system that makes them talk to each other. A child can have three separate providers and still fall through the gap between them.
And then there is awareness. Families across Arizona, particularly in communities that have been historically underserved, are often navigating mental health care without a map. They don't always know that integrated care exists. They don't always know that feeling like something is wrong is enough of a reason to reach out. They wait, sometimes for years, for the situation to become undeniable before they take action.
What the ranking doesn't tell you
Here's what a statistic can't capture: the number of families who did everything right and still ended up in a system that wasn't built for their child.
I think about the parents who found a therapist after a six-month wait, only to realize their child also needed a psychiatric evaluation that required a separate referral, a separate wait, and a separate set of appointments with no coordination between them. I think about the families who were told to "try therapy first" for a child whose symptoms clearly warranted a more comprehensive assessment from the beginning.
The system isn't failing these families because the individual providers don't care. They do. It's failing them because behavioral health in Arizona, like in most of the country, was not designed around the complexity of what children actually need. It was designed around individual disciplines operating in parallel. And parallel is not the same as together.
The gap isn't always in the quality of care. It's almost always in the coordination of it.
What actually moves the needle
I've been working in behavioral health in Arizona long enough to have watched what changes outcomes and what doesn't.
What doesn't: adding one more individual provider to an already-fragmented picture. A child who is working with a therapist, a pediatrician, and a school counselor who never speak to each other doesn't have a care team. They have three separate relationships, each holding a piece of a puzzle that no one is assembling.
What does: a coordinated team that shares information, adjusts the plan together, and keeps the family at the center of every decision. When a therapist and a clinician are reviewing the same child, informed by the same family history and the same school context, their work together becomes exponentially more effective. The whole is genuinely more than the sum of its parts. That's not a philosophy. It's what I've watched happen in clinical practice over and over again.
This is why integrated behavioral health isn't a premium feature that some families are lucky enough to access. It's the standard of care that Arizona children deserve, and the gap between what's available and what's needed is part of why we rank where we rank.
What this means for your family right now
If you're a parent in Phoenix and this feels like a familiar landing, I want to offer you a few things to hold on to.
First: the system being broken is not a reflection of your child. Children who are struggling in Arizona are struggling in a context of genuine scarcity and fragmentation. That context shapes outcomes in ways that have nothing to do with how hard a family is trying or how much a child wants to get better.
Second: you are allowed to ask for more. You are allowed to ask whether your child's providers are talking to each other. You are allowed to ask whether a psychiatric evaluation should be part of the picture, even if no one has suggested it yet. You are allowed to want a team, not a list of individual appointments.
Third: integrated care exists here, in Phoenix, right now. At Roya Health, we built a practice specifically because this gap was real and we had seen what closing it could do for families. One team, fully coordinated, around one child. It's the model Arizona families deserve, and it shouldn't be as hard to find as it currently is.
The ranking of 49th is a call to do better statewide. But while that systemic work unfolds, individual families still need somewhere to go. We're here for that.
If your family is navigating the mental health system in Phoenix and feels like something is missing, reach out. Sometimes the missing piece is exactly what we've spent years building.
Dr. Shar Najafi-Piper, PhD
Founder & CEO, Roya Health. Integrated behavioral health for children and families across the greater Phoenix, AZ area. Learn more at roya.health.

