U.S COMMITTEE FOR REFUGEES AND IMMIGRANTS
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Behavioral Health Support

** Please note that while USCRI continues to provide behavioral health resources for resettled residents, the National Wellness Helpline and Crisis Response Team (CRT) services have concluded as of September 2025 due to the end of program funding. **

Learn how USCRI’s Refugee Health Services program addresses settlement challenges for resettled residents nationwide through behavioral health support services.

Get Help

National Wellness Helpline:

USCRI has set up a national wellness helpline to support newly resettled ORR-eligible populations (to see if you are an ORR-eligible person, please see eligibility criteria here). Counseling is provided as needed, and referrals to appropriate services are provided immediately. Cases in need of emergency intervention will be flagged to the Crisis Response Team (CRT).

To see Helpline Flyers click here.

Crisis Response Teams (CRT)

USCRI’s crisis response team (CRT) is a multidisciplinary team equipped to provide immediate support to clients experiencing a behavioral health crisis. CRT will coordinate with individual state health systems to deliver direct clinical services, psychosocial support, and wellness initiatives for those in need of immediate care and treatment.

To access the Patient Intake Form, click here.

Resources for Providers and Clients

Mental Health First Aid Training Glossary of Key Terms

 د رواني روغتیا لمړنیو مرستو د ښوونیز پروګرام د مهمو اصطلاحاتو ټولګه

Pashto (پښتو,)Version

Glossary Dari Version image

برنامھ صحت رفتاری
فھرست اصطلاحات کلیدی پروگرام آموزشی کمک ھای اولیھ صحت رواني

(Dari (دری,) Version)

Glossary English Version image

Mental Health First Aid Training Glossary of Key Terms (English Version)

Self-Harm Among Migrants & Refugees

Self-Harm Among
Migrants & Refugees

Adjustment Disorder

English Version

Dari (دری,) Version

Pashto (پښتو,)Version

What You Need to Know About Body Safety and Consent:

ھغھ څھ چی تاسو باید پوه سی
د جنسی بد چلند او
ځوروني پھ ھکلھ

Pashto (پښتو,)Version

آنچھ کھ شما باید بدانید در مورد
سوء استفاده، آزار
و اذیت جنسی

(Dari (دری,) Version)

What You Need to Know About Body Safety and Consent

(English Version)

What to Expect When Taking Your Child to a Doctor's Visit

Mental Health & Wellness for Refugees

Force Displacement & Trauma

Contact Us

Contact us at [email protected] or 800-615-6514 if you or someone you know is experiencing emotional distress.

In case of an emergency, please call 911.

Country Conditions: Ukraine February 2026

On February 24, 2026, Ukraine enters its fifth year of war after a full-scale Russian invasion of the country began in 2022. As war rages on, civilian casualties and mass displacement continue to impact people both in and from Ukraine. USCRI’s situation update will cover the mass displacement crisis, the humanitarian situation in Ukraine, and […]

Policy and Advocacy Newsletter: VOLUME 9 | ISSUE NO.6 February 20, 2026

Featured Brief  Double displacement occurs when people who have already been uprooted once are forced to flee again. As extreme heat, rising sea levels, and intensifying storms reshape the planet, millions will find themselves displaced multiple times over.  Refugees are among the most vulnerable to climate shocks. By 2050, the United Nations predicts that many […]

Refugees Twice Over: Climate Migration and ‘Double Displacement’

By: Alexia Gardner, USCRI Policy Analyst, and Anum Merchant, USCRI Policy Intern  Extreme weather continues to drive new large-scale displacement, with 2024 ranked among the highest years recorded. From typhoons to droughts, climate-related disasters threaten people’s ability to sustain themselves in their homeland, forcing them to seek safety elsewhere. Marginalized communities, despite contributing little to the burning of fossil fuels, will disproportionately face the devastating effects […]