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Mental Health for Nurses in Georgia

RNs, LPNs, nurse practitioners, CNAs. This page combines the culture-specific resources for your profession with Georgia-specific insurance and therapist options.

Why this combination matters
Nurse suicide rate is 18% higher than general population. ~50% report burnout. Male nurses report higher isolation — only ~13% of nurses are men. In Georgia, the partial mental health parity enforcement, un-expanded Medicaid, and local provider density shape what's actually accessible — which is why generic 'find a therapist' advice so often fails men in your profession.

National resources for nurses

Profession-specific support that works in every state:

Nurses House
Emergency financial aid + advocacy for RN wellness.
Open →
American Nurses Foundation — Well-Being Initiative
Free resources, peer support app (SE (Stress & Resilience).
Open →
Physician Support Line also serves nurses
Volunteer psychiatrists take nurse callers too.
Open →

Georgia-specific resources

These Georgia organizations know both nurses culture AND Georgia's insurance landscape:

988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline (Georgia routing)
All 988 calls route to local Georgia centers. Free, confidential, 24/7.
Call 988
Georgia state crisis / behavioral health resources
Georgia Medicaid expanded partially in 2023 (Pathways program). Amerigroup, CareSource coverage.
Learn more →
Veterans Crisis Line (988 Press 1)
Relevant for many of your peers even if you're not a veteran.
Call

Georgia insurance realities

For nurses in Georgia: State nursing boards vary on mental health disclosure. Most now focus on CURRENT impairment. Check your specific state board's language.

Georgia parity: Partial parity — federal law applies but state enforcement weaker · Medicaid: Medicaid NOT expanded — coverage gap for many working adults

Free tool
Not sure what's going on?

The PHQ-9 is the depression screener your doctor uses. Private. Printable for your appointment.

Take the PHQ-9 →