About Washington Thriving
About Us
Washington Thriving is a legislatively mandated, statewide effort to ensure every young person—from before birth to age 25—and their caregivers have access to equitable behavioral health education, prevention, treatment, crisis response, and ongoing support for well-being.
The Washington Thriving Strategic Plan
The Plan aims to transform how Washington approaches behavioral health for its youngest residents. The Plan intends to build a statewide behavioral health system where thriving is the norm and fewer young people experience crises and unmet behavioral health needs; where access to care is equitable regardless of location or background, service capacity meets the full spectrum of needs, and the vital conditions for health and well-being are strengthened for all.

What Is Behavioral Health?
Washington Thriving has developed a clear and accessible definition of behavioral health, informed by community. This definition reduces stigma and recognizes that good behavioral health is a positive state of well-being, and as important as physical health.
Behavioral health involves the interaction between a person’s body, brain, and the people and places around them, and includes the feelings and actions that affect their overall well-being.
A person’s behavioral health is influenced by social, developmental, physical, and psychological factors. Behavioral health challenges include mental health conditions such as depression and anxiety, substance use disorder (SUD), severe mental illness, and the co-occurrence of these with other factors such as intellectual and developmental disabilities and trauma.
Behavioral health challenges can:
What Is Washington’s Behavioral Health System?
Washington’s behavioral health system includes everyone and everything that helps support the behavioral health and well-being of young people and their families, as well as where and how services are provided. This includes those seeking and receiving care, those providing care, and those who pay for and manage programs and services.
Who the Strategic Plan Will Serve
Prenatal & infants
Maternal behavioral health, parent–infant bonding and relational health, early screening.
Early childhood
Family supports and social–emotional care in home and preschool.
School-age children
Skill-building, counseling, and supports in school and community.
Youth & young adults up to 25
Transition-aged services, housing & employment supports, substance use care.
Equitable by Design. Responsive in Practice.
We partner with communities who experience health inequities to ensure services are culturally and linguistically responsive—so every young person and family can access what they need, when and where they need it.
- Center caregivers, families, and young people across the care continuum and across the state.
 - Provide language access and culturally attuned supports at home, in schools, and in community.
 - Use data to surface inequities and drive real-time improvement.
 
Washington Thriving Contributors
- Young people
 - Caregivers
 - Providers
 - Community leaders
 - State agencies
 - Young people
 - Caregivers
 - Providers
 - Community leaders
 - State agencies
 
The Washington Thriving Strategic Plan was co-created by young people, caregivers, providers, and community leaders, alongside partners in state government, and this collaboration is just the beginning. The work to center the voices of young people, families, and communities is ongoing, and the process of shaping the system will continue to deepen as we move forward.
