2025-20747Notice

SAMHSA Submits Mental Health Data Forms for Approval

Published Date: 11/24/2025

Notice

Summary

SAMHSA is renewing its data collection toolkit for the Crisis Counseling Assistance and Training Program, which helps states, territories, and tribes support disaster survivors with counseling and education. This update affects communities recovering from disasters like wildfires and hurricanes, ensuring better tracking of services without adding extra costs or delays. The program keeps helping millions bounce back after tough times with quick, caring support.

Analyzed Economic Effects

6 provisions identified: 5 benefits, 1 costs, 0 mixed.

Crisis Counseling Toolkit Reinstated

SAMHSA is renewing the Data Resource Toolkit used for the Crisis Counseling Assistance and Training Program (CCP), which provides supplemental funding to states, territories, and tribes after a presidentially declared major disaster. The CCP has provided services to millions over more than 40 years and recent grants covered nearly all 50 states, 5 territories, and at least 4 tribes, including responses to Hurricanes Helene and Milton in 2024 and the Maui wildfire in 2023.

Form Updates for Data Consistency

The Individual Encounter Log, Group Encounter Log, and ARTs were updated to align race and ethnicity collection with updated OMB guidance, to align sex collection with White House guidance, and to update adult age collection to SAMHSA conventions. The Child/Youth ART’s PTSD assessment was updated to the validated abbreviated UCLA PTSD Reaction Index for DSM-5, and the Group Log added a question about primary language.

Estimated Time Burden on Providers

SAMHSA estimates total annualized burden of 32,784 hours across an estimated 8,000 respondents and 227,200 total responses for the toolkit instruments. Example instrument estimates include 160,000 individual encounter responses (0.13 hours each) and 41,600 weekly tally responses (0.20 hours each).

Removal of Sensitive Questions

The revised forms remove the question about recent immigration and remove the question about suicidal ideation from the Assessment and Referral Tools. The Participant Feedback Survey now explicitly states the form is voluntary, allows respondents to skip questions, and adds a "prefer not to answer" option.

New Referral Options and Wording Changes

Forms add a separate referral option for "FEMA-funded programs," change wording from "self-help groups" to "self-help or support groups," add "stress management" examples, and in Child/Youth ART use the terms "caregiver" and "child or youth." Assessment tools are typically used beginning 3 months after a disaster, and Participant Feedback and Service Provider Feedback are sampled biannually at 6 months and 1 year after the disaster.

National Database Enables Program Reports

Data from the toolkit are entered via mobile or paper forms and uploaded to a national database that links data collected across CCPs. This linked database allows SAMHSA CMHS and FEMA to produce summary reports of services provided across all funded programs.

Your PRIA Score

Score Hidden

Personalized for You

How does this regulation affect your finances?

Sign up for a PRIA Policy Scan to see your personalized alignment score for this federal register document and every other regulation we track. We analyze your financial profile against policy provisions to show you exactly what matters to your wallet.

Free to start

Key Dates

Published Date
11/24/2025

Department and Agencies

Department
Independent Agency
Agency
Health and Human Services Department
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration
Source: View HTML
Back to Federal Register

Take It Personal

Get Your Personalized Policy View

Start a Free Government Policy Watch to see how policy affects your household, then upgrade to PRIA Full Coverage for year-round monitoring.

Already have an account? Sign in