EIN 80-0478843

Child Mind Institute

IRS 501(c) type
501(c)(3)
Num. employees
152
Year formed
2009
Most recent tax filings
2022-09-01
Description
The Child Mind Institute is an independent, national dedicated to transforming the lives of children and families struggling with mental health and learning disorders.
Total revenues
$71,051,674
2022
Total expenses
$53,290,226
2022
Total assets
$59,064,641
2022
Num. employees
152
2022

Program areas at Child Mind Institute

Public education and outreachcmi has a public education mission to provide authoritative, science-based information and resources about children's mental health to parents, educators, and other mental health professionals.childmind.org - cmi's web site contains a wealth of information, news, advice, and strategies for parents, educators, and other professionals dealing with psychiatric and learning disorders in children and adolescents. Childmind.org has partnered with dozens of other sites and blogs to share content and enlarge the footprint of the articles and resources we have created, and a robust social media campaign uses tools like facebook and twitter to spread the word. Parent and educator workshops on clinical topics - the parent and educator workshops cover a range of issues affecting children, including selective mutism, adhd, obsessive-compulsive disorder, and others. These educational workshops provide an opportunity for parents, teachers, and other caring professionals to gain new knowledge, insights and skills to improve their ability to parent and nurture children with these disorders and help them thrive.school and community programs- the Child Mind Institute's school and community programs deliver mental health support to students, caregivers, educators, and counselors. Breaking down barriers to care, our programs bring a suite of evidence-based services to prevent and treat student mental health disorders in school and community settings, including a k-12 mental health skill-building curriculum, workshops for caregivers, professional development for educators, and evidence-based treatment delivered in school or community settings to children and teens struggling with posttraumatic stress, behavior, attentional, mood, or learning disorders. Our team also provides professional training for educators and community-based mental health professionals in new york, san francisco bay area, and school districts across the united states, laying the groundwork for sustainable capacity building and ongoing support in districts where mental health services may be less available or more difficult to access. The healthy minds, thriving kids project (hmtk), funded by the state of California, set out to give every educator and caregiver in the state (and beyond) a set of free resources they could use to teach children a set of evidence-based preventative mental health skills. At its core is a series of five key skill-building videos, created from the ground up in english and spanish, in three age versions, along with introductory videos in both languages for educators and caregivers for a total of 34 videos and accompanying implementation guides and skill sheets. Awareness of these resources was developed through an extensive paid digital promotional campaign. Additionally, an incentive plan offered educators $100 awards for sampling project materials and providing feedback. Their school districts were incentivized to promote the project via matching donorschoose credits. An independent research firm was engaged to assess resource quality and implementation. Altogether, hmtk attracted 72,500 California educators and reached over 1.8 million children within its first 9 months.
Access to clinical carecmi aims to help children, teens, and families access the clinical care they need to live healthy, fulfilling lives.financial aid program - cmi launched its financial aid program in an effort to help children and families receive care and treatment, regardless of economic standing, from our clinicians. The financial aid program is designed in a way that allows patients from low-income families to qualify, while also accommodating middle-income families who face other financial strains. Grant to ca practice from west coast campaign - in order to provide a new level of compassionate, evidence-based care to san francisco bay area families, the Child Mind Institute provides grant support to the Child Mind medical practice, pc. This grant support facilitated the formation of the ca practice and continues to support its conduct of clinical and community-based activities that further cmi's mission. The clinicians in san mateo diagnosed and treated patients, launched innovative group programs, and built on our partnerships with local schools and community organizations. Administrative support - in addition, pursuant to services agreements, the Child Mind Institute provides administrative support and services to the Child Mind medical practice, pllc in new york, ny and the Child Mind medical practice, pc in san mateo, ca.
Science and innovationcmi has a science and innovation mission that strives to create a world where every Child has access to mental health care that is efficient, effective, and personalized. Timely, accurate diagnoses and efficient interventions are central to the cmi vision. As such, our mission is to accelerate the pace of scientific innovation and discovery in children's mental health and learning. We are committed to democratizing inquiry by making tools and data freely available to the global scientific community. This helps to foster collaborations that can test, improve upon, and adopt innovative open solutions for the benefit of every child.on the shoulders of giants - each year, cmi's scientific research council selects a scientist to receive the distinguished scientist award for his or her lifetime of research and contributions to the fields of children's mental health and developmental neuroscience. At the on the shoulders of giants symposium, the awardee is a featured speaker, along with two generations of his or her proteges.center for the developing brain - psychiatric diagnosis is limited by a lack of objective tools for assessing symptoms and behaviors. The center leads a multidisciplinary effort to redefine diagnosis based on underlying neurobiology, leading to the development of better diagnostic tools. We use advanced experimental and analytical techniques to determine how brain function and structure differ among individuals and are impacted by mental illness across development. Central to our open science agenda, the center houses the international neuroimaging data-sharing initiative (indi), which has served as a flagship for open science in the brain imaging community and led to the generation of more than 1000 publications by authors around the world.computational neuroimaging laboratory - accelerating the pace of scientific discovery requires significant innovation in the analysis methods employed by scientists. The laboratory is building the infrastructure necessary by providing high quality, scalable, and reproducible turnkey solutions to computational challenges in image processing and analysis. Widespread access will enable scientists everywhere to deploy large-scale analyses without extensive expertise. All software generated is openly shared throughout the development cycle.healthy brain network - the healthy brain network (hbn) is an innovative neuroscience research program aimed at building the largest, most comprehensive data resource focused exclusively on children and adolescents and sharing the data with scientists globally. Through a proven big data and open science paradigm, we expect that this initiative will spur the discovery of brain-based biomarkers of psychiatric and learning disorders. Cmi expects that the research will lead to the development of objective clinical tools for mental health practitioners to provide more accurate diagnoses and treatment protocols for struggling children. Scientific research council - selected from among the nation's top children's mental health scientists, the scientific research council brings together scientists and research clinicians to create a global incubator for collaborative research in children's mental health. Functioning as a multi-institutional scientific think-tank, the council includes distinguished scientists in the fields of Child and adolescent psychiatry, psychology, neuroscience, and neurology, and experts in anxiety and mood disorders, adhd, autism spectrum disorders, and eating disorders.matter lab - the matter ("mental assistive technologies for therapy, education, and research") lab is developing wearable technologies and mobile apps that help gather real-world data useful for scientists studying mental health disorders, and creating robust research protocols so data is of high quality and dependable. This data on environmental stressors, movement and behavior tracking can potentially be used to alert young people and families to the onset of symptomatic behaviors.the lab is also working on a database that evaluates the research support for apps and matches them to the behaviors and symptoms they can help. The hope is that large-scale, standardized data collection and analysis will lead to simple but powerful mobile tools for diagnosis and evaluation.autism center - the autism center is an integrated research lab focused on understanding the neurobiology of autism spectrum disorder using brain imaging and a range of other clinical and cognitive approaches. A specific goal of the center is detecting autism-related differences in brain connectivity that emerge in early childhood, with the goal of identifying objective biological markers that can one day be used to improve early intervention efforts and the selection of treatments. Consistent with our open science philosophy, the center houses the autism brain imaging data exchange, which represents the largest open repository for autism brain imaging data in the world.
Child and adolescent mental health initiativethe Child and adolescent mental health initiative is a program to help enhance Child and adolescent mental health care capacity and strengthen the infrastructure for the prevention, assessment, and treatment of mental health struggles faced by children and adolescents in greece. This is a nationwide "train-the-trainer" program that will be supplemented by free resources for healthcare professionals and the general public.

Who funds Child Mind Institute

Grants from foundations and other nonprofits
GrantmakerDescriptionAmount
National Philanthropic TrustHealth$20,468,837
Charles and Helen Schwab FoundationHuman Services$1,750,000
Richard and Christine Mack Family FoundCharity$750,000
...and 117 more grants received totalling $29,511,834

Personnel at Child Mind Institute

NameTitleCompensation
Julia BurnsFormer Chief Financial Officer$218,823
Maryana GellerPresident$68,328
Amie ClancyChief Administrative Officer$284,101
Jeffrey R ChapmanVice President Marketing and Communications$272,324
Sarah BurkeVice President of Strategic Initiatives$225,953
...and 16 more key personnel

Financials for Child Mind Institute

RevenuesFYE 09/2022
Total grants, contributions, etc.$67,291,090
Program services$201,315
Investment income and dividends$1,053,345
Tax-exempt bond proceeds$0
Royalty revenue$0
Net rental income$0
Net gain from sale of non-inventory assets$-729,286
Net income from fundraising events$0
Net income from gaming activities$0
Net income from sales of inventory$0
Miscellaneous revenues$3,235,210
Total revenues$71,051,674

Form 990s for Child Mind Institute

Fiscal year endingDate received by IRSFormPDF link
2022-092023-08-10990View PDF
2021-092022-08-15990View PDF
2020-092021-08-12990View PDF
2019-092020-10-22990View PDF
2018-092019-06-19990View PDF
...and 8 more Form 990s

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Dave Thomas Foundation for Adoption (DTFA)Dublin, OH$45,774,004
Campaign for Tobacco-Free KidsWashington, DC$40,354,963
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Helen Keller International (HKI)New York, NY$121,068,878
Data update history
September 25, 2023
Posted financials
Added Form 990 for fiscal year 2022
September 24, 2023
Updated personnel
Identified 2 new personnel
August 19, 2023
Received grants
Identified 99 new grant, including a grant for $1,750,000 from Charles and Helen Schwab Foundation
July 17, 2023
Posted financials
Added Form 990 for fiscal year 2021
July 13, 2023
Used new vendors
Identified 24 new vendors, including , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , and
Nonprofit Types
Mental health organizationsYouth service charitiesHeadquarter / parent organizationsCharities
Issues
HealthMental healthChildrenDiseases and disorders
Characteristics
LobbyingFundraising eventsOperates internationallyNational levelReceives government fundingEndowed supportGala fundraisersTax deductible donations
General information
Address
101 E 56th St
New York, NY 10022
Metro area
New York-Newark-Jersey City, NY-NJ-PA
County
New York County, NY
Website URL
childmind.org/ 
Phone
(212) 308-3118
Facebook page
ChildMindInstitute 
Twitter profile
@childminddotorg 
IRS details
EIN
80-0478843
Fiscal year end
September
Taxreturn type
Form 990
Year formed
2009
Eligible to receive tax-deductible contributions (Pub 78)
Yes
Categorization
NTEE code, primary
F01: Mental Health and Crisis Intervention Alliances and Advocacy
NAICS code, primary
624110: Child and Youth Services
Parent/child status
Central organization
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