As Mental Health Awareness Month ends, Carson Tahoe Health is highlighting a proactive, prevention-focused approach to addressing Nevada’s youth mental health crisis. Through its innovative Vehicles of Change program, Carson Tahoe is redefining what whole health looks like and setting a new standard for prevention-focused care across the state.
Nevada continues to rank among the worst in the nation for mental health, with growing numbers of children experiencing crisis-level needs. Carson Tahoe Health witnessed this firsthand as the pediatric unit filled with youth in emotional distress, a space designed to treat physical medical needs. In response, the organization took swift action to expand clinical services. But just as importantly, it asked a different question: What if we didn’t wait for kids to break?

The answer is Vehicles of Change: a pioneering mobile program designed to bring mental health support directly into the community. These welcoming, innovative mobile units deliver play-based, clinically grounded activities that help youth build resilience, connection, and emotional well-being in schools, neighborhoods, and community settings. The program is designed to help youth build resilience, connection, and emotional wellness skills before challenges escalate into crisis.
Impact Across Northern Nevada
In partnership with the Boys & Girls Club of Western Nevada, Carson Tahoe Health has completed two pilot programs in Carson City and Douglas County, delivering more than 1,344 hours of programming and directly impacting approximately 400 youth.
Early feedback suggests the program is helping strengthen peer connection, engagement, and emotional resilience among participating youth. This work has been made possible through a combination of state and public grant funding, along with generous support from private donors, reflecting strong community support for youth mental health prevention.

Building on this momentum, expansion is already underway in the Lyon County School District, with a focus on reaching rural communities, where access to care can be especially limited. At the same time, Carson Tahoe Health is developing a scalable model for building crucial life skills, one that can be replicated and adopted by other communities across Nevada and beyond to create lasting, system-wide change.
Early-stage feedback from both youth and adult facilitators highlights the program’s transformative impact. Across responses, four key themes emerged:
Connection: Youth built meaningful relationships with peers and facilitators, extending beyond the program into the community.
Engaging & Interactive: Hands-on, dynamic activities kept youth consistently involved and energized.
Teamwork: Participants developed collaboration skills, breaking down social barriers and fostering inclusion.
Authentic & Unique: Youth felt safe to be themselves in a program unlike anything they had experienced before.

A unique component of the program includes a “Day with a Hero,” where first responders and community heroes engage directly with youth. During these sessions, they help teach breathing techniques, participate in activities, and help youth practice emergency response skills and build confidence, trust, and real-world skills in a supportive environment.
Activities such as box breathing keep youth engaged and equip them with practical tools to manage stress and build emotional resilience. Participants and staff reported strong positive impact, noting high engagement, improved emotional regulation, increased peer-to-peer connection, and enthusiasm for the program — even in settings they typically did not enjoy.
A New Model for Prevention and Whole Health
Vehicles of Change is part of Carson Tahoe Health’s broader Healing Our Kids & Community initiative, which integrates clinical care with prevention, play, and community connection. The goal is both simple and transformative: build an “emotional immune system” in youth well before crisis occurs.
By removing barriers such as cost, transportation, and stigma, Vehicles of Change is demonstrating that prevention can drive measurable, system-wide change by equipping youth with the tools they need to navigate life’s challenges with confidence and resilience.
Leading the State Forward
Through expanding community outreach and innovative prevention programs, Carson Tahoe Health continues to advance youth mental health support across Northern Nevada. Complementing these efforts is a full continuum of behavioral health services for children, adolescents, and adults, including inpatient and outpatient care, therapy, counseling, medication management, the Mallory Behavioral Health Crisis Center for adults, and the Youth Behavioral Health Crisis Center for children and teens in crisis.
By combining clinical care with prevention, education, and community connection, Carson Tahoe Health is helping build healthier, more resilient communities while advancing a new model for whole-person mental health care in Nevada.
If you or someone you know is experiencing a mental health crisis or needs immediate support, call or text 988 to connect with the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline.
Additional behavioral health resources are available through Carson Tahoe Health at www.carsontahoe.com/bhs. Learn More about Carson Tahoe’s Healing Our Kids initiative at www.healingourkids.org.
