Resilience Ecosystem Platform

Mental Health Organizations On The Platform

Health systems cannot improve in isolation. This platform depends on shared data and shared responsibility.

Transparency creates coordination Coordination enables scale Scale creates impact.

Each organization that updates their profile, shares their projects, and articulates their needs, creates a more accurate and useful ecosystem map. The more complete the map, the more effectively we can:

  • Identify structural gaps
  • Strengthen collaboration
  • Inform policy and philanthropy
  • Support system-level decision-making
  • Reduce fragmentation and duplication

This platform depends on the participation of every organization in the field.

Explore organizations across geographies, populations served, focus areas, and intervention types. Identify partners, peers, and complementary initiatives.

Find organizations working on similar issues or serving overlapping populations. Identify opportunities for collaboration across sectors.

Each organization can claim and manage their profile.

By claiming your profile, you can:

  • Update organizational details
  • Add current projects and initiatives
  • List partnership needs or funding needs
  • Signal interest in collaboration

This ensures that the ecosystem map reflects the real and current state of the field.

We engage directly with the field to map the ecosystem, surface insights, and learn from what is happening on the ground.

We listen closely to service providers, community voices, public system leaders, researchers and experts, funders, and innovators to understand the mental health ecosystem from every angle. By examining the full landscape, we identify what is working well, where gaps or duplication exist, where coordination can improve, and what partnerships are possible. Only by understanding the system as a whole can we create meaningful, large-scale, and lasting impact.

Data Collection

We collect data from multiple sources, recognizing that no single source provides a complete picture. Our primary resources include GuideStar, official websites of mental health organizations, government reports, and existing research publications. In addition, we conduct interviews with mental health professionals and organizational leaders to gain firsthand insights into service gaps and emerging needs.

for more information

This list is for informational purposes only. Inclusion does not imply endorsement, and ICAR Collective has not conducted due diligence on all the organizations listed. The list may not be comprehensive, and we welcome feedback—if we’ve missed an organization or miscategorized one, please let us know!