Mental Health for Nurses in Texas
RNs, LPNs, nurse practitioners, CNAs. This page combines the culture-specific resources for your profession with Texas-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 Texas, 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:
Texas-specific resources
These Texas organizations know both nurses culture AND Texas's insurance landscape:
988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline (Texas routing)
All 988 calls route to local Texas centers. Free, confidential, 24/7.
Texas state crisis / behavioral health resources
Texas Medicaid STAR. No expansion leaves large gap. Strong state crisis lines.
Veterans Crisis Line (988 Press 1)
Relevant for many of your peers even if you're not a veteran.
Texas insurance realities
For nurses in Texas: State nursing boards vary on mental health disclosure. Most now focus on CURRENT impairment. Check your specific state board's language.
Texas 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 →