The Giving Directory

Mental Health

Mental Health Cooperative

Delivers integrated community health care and mental health services to individuals and families in Middle Tennessee.

Founded 1962 64 years of work
Focus United States
Rating 96/100 Charity Navigator

A score of 96 out of 100 from Charity Navigator places Mental Health Cooperative among the most accountable, transparent, and operationally sound nonprofits in the United States.

What this charity does

Mental-health nonprofits operate across crisis intervention, direct treatment, research, advocacy, and public-awareness campaigns. Crisis lines (text and phone) provide immediate suicide-prevention and emotional support. Treatment-focused organizations offer therapy on sliding-scale fees, expand access to psychiatric care, and integrate mental-health services into primary care. Advocacy groups work on parity laws, insurance coverage, and reducing stigma. Funding supports clinicians, crisis-counselor training, research, and policy work.

Why it matters

For crisis lines, look at response time, training rigor, and outcome data on caller follow-up. For treatment-focused organizations, examine evidence-based therapy modalities used, average wait times, and patient outcomes (where reported). Mental Health America and The Trevor Project publish outcome data — use that as a benchmark when evaluating others.

Common programs in this space

Mental Health Cooperative works within mental health. These are the kinds of programs typically run in this space — visit their site for current specifics.

  • Crisis text and phone lines providing 24/7 suicide-prevention support
  • Community mental-health clinics offering sliding-scale therapy and psychiatric care
  • Research into evidence-based treatments and prevention
  • School-based mental-health programs and educator training
  • Advocacy for mental-health parity, insurance coverage, and reduced stigma

How to support beyond a one-time gift

  • + Recurring monthly gifts particularly help crisis lines maintain staffing predictability
  • + Volunteer as a crisis counselor (most organizations offer extensive training)
  • + Advocate for mental-health parity in insurance laws at the state level
  • + Share resources publicly — destigmatization is itself a major intervention
  • + Donate to research-focused organizations to accelerate the next generation of treatments

Verify before you give

A few minutes of independent verification pays off — especially for larger gifts. These resources let you confirm the details on Mental Health Cooperative:

Frequently asked

Is Mental Health Cooperative a registered 501(c)(3) nonprofit?
Mental Health Cooperative operates as a registered nonprofit organization. You can verify their current 501(c)(3) tax-exempt status using the IRS Tax Exempt Organization Search tool. We recommend confirming directly on the IRS website before making any large donation.
What percentage of donations to Mental Health Cooperative goes to programs?
Program-expense ratios change year to year and are published in Mental Health Cooperative's annual Form 990 filing. You can read the most recent filings on ProPublica's Nonprofit Explorer or Candid (formerly GuideStar). Charity Navigator has rated Mental Health Cooperative at 96/100, reflecting its overall financial health and accountability.
How does Mental Health Cooperative measure its impact?
Mental Health Cooperative publishes impact reporting through its annual report, program-specific updates on its website, and the rating analysis from Charity Navigator. For crisis lines, look at response time, training rigor, and outcome data on caller follow-up. For treatment-focused organizations, examine evidence-based therapy modalities used, average wait times, and patient outcomes (where reported). Mental Health America and The Trevor Project publish outcome data — use that as a benchmark when evaluating others.
What's the most effective way to donate to Mental Health Cooperative?
Most charities — including Mental Health Cooperative — get the most use out of unrestricted, recurring monthly donations. Recurring gifts let the organization plan staffing and program commitments. You can also donate appreciated stock to avoid capital-gains tax, leave a planned gift in your will, or take advantage of employer-matching programs.
How can I support Mental Health Cooperative without donating money?
Recurring monthly gifts particularly help crisis lines maintain staffing predictability Volunteer as a crisis counselor (most organizations offer extensive training) Advocate for mental-health parity in insurance laws at the state level Visit the official website at mhc-tn.org for current volunteer and advocacy opportunities.