Your (Unofficial) Guide to State-Sponsored Therapy in New Mexico
There’s a way to get affordable mental health care that you might not know about. That’s New Mexico’s mental health system.
If you qualify, you can get mental health care at a local publicly-funded program for a small co-pay or a low sliding-scale fee. But even if you don’t qualify for services at a state-funded provider, New Mexico’s system can still give you information, referrals to affordable providers, and other essential help for free.
Are You Thinking of Online Therapy? Start Here to Get Matched with a Licensed Therapist Right For You.
Therapy with No Waiting Rooms or Driving. Take a quick quiz about your preferences and needs and get matched to a therapist in as little as 48 hours.
Have you been in therapy before?
If you’re in a hurry and want to get the most essential information about what’s available in the New Mexico mental health system and who it’s for, you can read our quick start guide below.
Quick Start Guide
Quick facts about New Mexico’s mental health system:
- New Mexico’s mental health system is decentralized and made up of private mental health agencies and providers who accept Medicaid and other public funding.
- All providers in New Mexico’s public mental health network accept Centennial Care and other insurance plans. Many also offer affordable sliding-scale fees.
What services are available?
- Outpatient mental health services including psychiatric evaluation, medication management, and group and individual therapy are available at publicly-funded providers throughout the state.
- The New Mexico Behavioral Health Institute operates four community-based mental health locations that offer publicly-funded specialty and intensive mental health services, like wraparound care, that can be hard to find anywhere else.
Who’s eligible?
- New Mexico’s Crisis and Access Line is available to all New Mexico residents without exception. It’s a great place to start your search for affordable care.
- Because most publicly-funded mental health services in New Mexico are offered by private providers, most do not have strict eligibility criteria (though you have to meet income criteria to qualify for Centennial Care or other public funding).
- Some specialty services are only available to people with severe conditions like schizophrenia and major depression. However, more people have a severe condition than realize it! In fact, 1 in 10 Americans experience major depression each year.
Where can you get started?
- You can reach local mental health crisis and information services from anywhere in New Mexico by dialing 1-855-NMCRISIS (662-7474).
- You can find providers in your local area who accept Centennial Care and other public funding by scrolling to the directory below.
To learn more about the public mental health system in New Mexico, keep reading. We’ve done the research to uncover essential facts about who’s eligible, what services you can get, when to go, where to call, and how it works so you can decide if a publicly-funded provider might be right for you.
Who Is Eligible?
You should consider looking into the public mental health system in New Mexico if you (or a loved one) are in crisis, have a severe mental health condition, have Centennial Care, or have a limited income.
Everyone in New Mexico can use the state-funded mental health emergency response system. If you or someone you love is in crisis, you can call the New Mexico crisis line to get the help you need, quickly.
PRO TIP
Use the State System When You're in Crisis
Public mental health services are usually the best option if you’re having a mental health crisis and need help right away.
State mental health programs are required to provide mental health crisis response services and are one of the fastest ways to get care when you’re having a mental health emergency.
The people who answer state crisis lines can provide caring attention and support as they help you determine the best response to a crisis, whether it’s inpatient treatment or an appointment with a counselor.
Even if you’re not in crisis, you can call the New Mexico Crisis and Access Line for information about affordable mental health services in your area.
When you call, you can find out whether you might qualify for state-funded mental health services or get free information about affordable local providers.
There are many options for affordable care. New Mexico’s mental health system is decentralized, so there are no statewide restrictions on who can use it. Instead, eligibility criteria vary from provider to provider.
Most publicly-funded providers in New Mexico do not have strict (if any) limits on who can receive outpatient mental health services like therapy and psychiatric care.
What changes depending on your financial situation and diagnosis is whether you qualify for financial aid. You need to meet income eligibility criteria to qualify for Centennial Care, which all providers who participate in the public system accept.
However, you don’t need Centennial Care to go to most publicly-funded providers. Most providers in the public system also accept private insurance. If you don’t have insurance or would prefer to pay out of pocket, most also offer sliding-scale fees.
PRO TIP
Who Is Eligible for Medicaid in New Mexico?
The primary point of access to the public mental health system in New Mexico is Centennial Care, New Mexico’s Medicaid program. To be eligible, you need to have an income that is 138 percent of the federal poverty level or less.
If you qualify, you can choose a Centennial Care plan from one of these three managed care organizations:
Once you have a plan, you can use the provider search feature on your plan’s page to find mental health providers who accept your insurance.
In many cases, going to a publicly-funded provider in New Mexico is the same as going to a provider that’s not part of the public system: you’ll either use your insurance or pay out of pocket. So, the best way to find affordable care is to look for providers who accept your insurance or offer good sliding-scale discounts.
Many publicly-funded mental health programs and integrated clinics in New Mexico provide group and individual therapy, psychiatric evaluation, medication management, and other basic outpatient mental health services. If you need specialty or intensive services like case management or day treatment, however, you’ll need to look for specialty providers who offer them.
PRO TIP
Check Out the State System If You Need Specialized Services
The New Mexico Behavioral Health Institute, New Mexico’s only publicly-funded inpatient psychiatric hospital, also offers outpatient and community-based mental health services at four locations in the state:
- Las Vegas: (505) 454-5100
- Mora: (575) 387-2677
- Pecos: (505) 757-6112
- Santa Rosa: (575) 472-3068
These are the only outpatient mental health providers in New Mexico’s public mental health system that are run directly by the state behavioral health department.
They have stricter eligibility requirements than most other programs in the public network and focus on serving people with severe and chronic mental illness.
You should consider looking into one of these programs if you’re at risk of hospitalization, your mental health condition affects your functioning, or you are homeless because of a mental health condition.
They offer specialized and intensive services like psychosocial rehabilitation, wraparound care, and supported housing that are designed to help you address these challenges.
There are no local or regional information lines or walk-in centers that function as an access point to the public mental health system in New Mexico.
Instead, the New Mexico Crisis and Access Line is the best place to start if you’re looking for information about the mental health system (or mental health services in general) in New Mexico. It isn’t just a crisis line for anyone who needs immediate help. It’s also set up to be an information and referral line that can help you connect with affordable mental health resources where you live.
Where Do You Call to Get Started?
The easiest way to learn more about state mental healthcare in New Mexico is to call the New Mexico Crisis and Access Line at 1-855-NMCRISIS (662-7474).
The people who answer are trained to help you figure out what kind of care you might need and where to go to get it. They can help you connect with local resources no matter where you live in New Mexico.
There are other hotlines that can help when you’re looking for information or support as well. Which one is best to call depends on what you need. You can find them listed in the information box below.
PRO TIP
Important Numbers in New Mexico
The national mental health crisis hotline is 988.
The national (and statewide) crisis text line is 741741.
The New Mexico Crisis and Access Line is 1-855-NMCRISIS (662-7474).
The New Mexico Peer-to-Peer Warmline is 1-855-4NM-7100 (466-7100).
You can reach the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) Helpline by calling 1-800-950-NAMI (6264).
You can reach the New Mexico National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) Information Line by calling (505) 260-0154.
You can reach the Behavioral Health Services Division of the New Mexico Human Services Department at (505) 476-9266.
Public mental health services in New Mexico are managed on the state level by the Behavioral Health Services Division (BHSD) of the New Mexico Human Services Department. For general information about New Mexico’s mental health system, you can contact BHSD at (505) 476-9266.
However, you’ll probably get the best results by calling the New Mexico Crisis and Access Line. They are the statewide point of contact for mental health information and crisis support and can help you figure out the best place to go to get the care you need.
New Mexico Clinic List
We’ve listed numbers for providers who participate in the New Mexico state mental health network below.
We’ve limited our listings to large agencies and group practices that provide adult outpatient mental health services and that accept Centennial Care.
PRO TIP
Contact Your Medicaid MCO for Updated Provider Lists
The main way that providers in New Mexico participate in the public system is by accepting Centennial Care. The best way to get updated information about providers that accept your insurance is to call your Medicaid Managed Care Organization (MCO) or go to their website.
There are currently three Medicaid MCOs in New Mexico:
- Presbyterian Health Plan: (888) 977-2333
- Western Sky Community Care: (844) 543-8996
- Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Mexico: (866) 689-1523
These MCOs are overseen by Centennial Care. You can start an application for Centennial Care by going to the YesNM Online Portal. You can reach Centennial Care to ask general questions about the state Medicaid system and the application process at 1-800-283-4465.
Because of the way New Mexico’s mental health system works, new providers can join the system at any time, while established public providers can stop participating by closing or by no longer accepting public funds.
We do our best to keep our list up-to-date, but there’s always a chance providers will close or opt out of the system before our next update. You can help us by letting us know if any of these providers have closed or no longer accept public insurance.
Participating Providers in the New Mexico Mental Health System
- Central New Mexico Clinics
- Adult Outpatient Providers in the New Mexico Public Mental Health Network:
- Acceptance Counseling (Albuquerque): (505) 557-4656
- Age to Age Counseling (Albuquerque): (505) 291-6314
- Albuquerque Behavioral Health:
- Albuquerque Office: (505) 830-6500
- Rio Rancho Office: (505) 867-0223
- Albuquerque Health Care for the Homeless (Albuquerque): (505) 766-5197 (homeless only)
- Albuquerque Psychiatry and Psychology (Albuquerque): (505) 247-1921
- Albuquerque United Behavioral Health Services (Albuquerque): (505) 916-5186
- Attachment Healing Center (Albuquerque and Los Lunas): (505) 237-0061
- Awake and Aware (Albuquerque): (505) 503-7946
- BeMeBetter (Albuquerque): (505) 293-2881
- Bosque Mental Health Associates (Albuquerque): (505) 503-6838
- Centro Sávila (Albuquerque): (505) 312-7296
- Christus Saint Vincent Behavioral Health Specialists (Santa Fe): (505) 913-3056
- Cognitive Behavioral Institute of Albuquerque (Albuquerque): (505) 823-1600
- Cottonwood Counseling (Albuquerque): (505) 226-2839
- Counseling ABQ (Albuquerque): (505) 209-2442
- Elevation Counseling (Albuquerque): (505) 888-1686
- Engender Wellness (Albuquerque): (505) 242-4400
- Enhancement Center (Albuquerque, Rio Rancho, and Corrales): (505) 891-1583
- First Choice Community Healthcare (behavioral health services are only available to established medical or dental patients):
- South Valley Center (Albuquerque): (505) 873-7400
- South Broadway Center (Albuquerque): (505) 768-5450
- North Valley Center (Albuquerque): (505) 345-3244
- Alameda Center (Albuquerque): (505) 890-1458
- Alamosa Center (Albuquerque): (505) 831-2534
- Belen Center (Belen): (505) 861-1013
- Edgewood Center (Edgewood): (505) 281-3406
- Los Lunas Center (Los Lunas): (505) 865-4618
- First Nations Community Healthsource:
- Zuni Healthcare Center (Albuquerque): (505) 262-2481
- All Nations Wellness and Healing Center (Albuquerque): (505) 717-2704
- Truman Healthcare Center (Albuquerque): (505) 248-2990
- Central Healthcare Center (Albuquerque): (505) 308-8060
- Full Circle Recovery (Los Lunas): (505) 865-4140
- Haven Behavioral Hospital of Albuquerque Outpatient Treatment Programs (Albuquerque): (505) 254-4502
- Healthy Families of Albuquerque (Albuquerque and Rio Rancho): (505) 842-9911
- Hopeworks Behavioral Health (Albuquerque): (505) 764-8231 (homeless only)
- Lotus Behavioral Health, LLC (Albuquerque): (505) 238-9551
- Mesa Vista Wellness (Santa Fe and Los Alamos): (505) 983-8225
- Mindful Counseling(Albuquerque): (505) 899-9329
- New Mexico Behavioral Health Institute Community-Based Services:
- Las Vegas Office: (505) 454-5100 or (505) 425-1048
- Mora Office: (575) 387-2677
- Pecos Office: (505) 757-6112
- Santa Rosa Office: (575) 472-3068 or (505) 472-3768
- New Mexico Solutions (Albuquerque): (505) 268-0701 or (505) 833-2300
- Open Skies Healthcare:
- Administrative Office (Albuquerque): (505) 345-8471
- Bernalillo County Office (Albuquerque): (505) 342-5454
- Sandoval County Office (Rio Rancho): (505) 891-9797
- Valencia County Office (Los Lunas): (505) 565-1761
- PeopleWorks NM (Rio Rancho and Albuquerque): (505) 990-4186
- Presbyterian Medical Services Behavioral Health:
- Esperanza Family Health Center (Estancia): (505) 384-2777
- Mountainair Family Health Center (Mountainair): (505) 847-2271
- Presbyterian Medical Services Family Health Center (Rio Rancho): (505) 896-7100
- Rio Rancho Family Health Center (Rio Rancho): (505) 896-0928
- Santa Fe Community Guidance Center (Santa Fe): (505) 986-9633
- Santa Fe Family Wellness Center (Santa Fe): (505) 471-5006
- Teen Health Center at Capital High (Santa Fe): (505) 467-1081
- Teen Health Center at Santa Fe High (Santa Fe): (505) 467-2439
- Raven Counseling and Wellness (Albuquerque): (505) 508-0808
- Rio Grande Counseling and Guidance Services (Albuquerque): (505) 246-8700
- Sage Neuroscience Center(Albuquerque): (505) 884-1114
- Serna Solutions (Santa Fe and Albuquerque): (505) 207-8929
- Solutions Treatment Center (Santa Fe and Albuquerque): (877) 499-1354 or (505) 424-3170
- Southwest Family Guidance Center and Institute:
- Main Office at Rio Grande (Albuquerque): (505) 830-1871
- Albuquerque East Office at Texas (Albuquerque): (505) 830-1871
- Albuquerque West Office at Corrales (Corrales): (505) 830-1871
- Los Lunas Office (Los Lunas): (505) 974-5890
- Santa Fe Office (Santa Fe): (505) 310-4764
- Albuquerque Old Town Office (Albuquerque): (505) 830-1871
- Streetwise Inc. (Albuquerque): (505) 323-3785
- The Community Lighthouse (Albuquerque): (505) 273-6300
- The Family Connection (Rio Rancho, Los Lunas, and Santa Fe): (505) 717-1155
- The Life Link (Santa Fe): (505) 438-0010
- The Mountain Center Counseling Services (Española, Santa Fe, and Tesuque): (505) 983-6158
- Therapeutic Living Services. Inc. (Albuquerque): (505) 268-5295
- UNM Health Sciences Behavioral Health Programs:
- UNM Psychiatric Center (Albuquerque): (505) 272-2800 or (505) 272-2920
- UNM Psychiatric Urgent Care Clinic (Albuquerque): (505) 272-2800 or (505) 272-9038
- UNM Psychiatric Center (Rio Rancho): (505) 994-5050
- UNM Psychiatric Center Psychosis Care Program (Albuquerque): (888) 663-2759
- UNM Psychiatric Center CareLink NM Program (Albuquerque): (505) 272-2573
- UNM Behavioral Health Comprehensive Community Support Services (Albuquerque): (505) 272-1221
- UNM Behavioral Health Psychosocial Rehabilitation (Albuquerque): (505) 272-5786
- UNM Behavioral Health Assertive Community Treatment (Albuquerque): (505) 925-4044
- UNM Behavioral Health Jail Diversion Services (Albuquerque): (505) 925-4353
- UNM Native American Behavioral Health Program (Albuquerque): (505) 272-6238
- UNM Center for Neuropsychological Services (Albuquerque): (505) 272-8833
- UNM Manzanita Counseling Center (Albuquerque): (505) 277-7311
- Walsh Counseling Services (Albuquerque): (505) 266-0504
- Native American Mental and Behavioral Health Resources in Central New Mexico:
- Albuquerque Indian Health Center (Albuquerque): (505) 248-4000
- First Nations Community Healthsource:
- Zuni Healthcare Center (Albuquerque): (505) 262-2481
- All Nations Wellness and Healing Center (Albuquerque): (505) 717-2704
- Truman Healthcare Center (Albuquerque): (505) 248-2990
- Central Healthcare Center (Albuquerque): (505) 308-8060
- Santa Fe IHS Service Unit (Santa Fe): (505) 988-9821
- UNM Native American Behavioral Health Program (Albuquerque): (505) 272-6238
- Adult Outpatient Providers in the New Mexico Public Mental Health Network:
- Northern New Mexico Clinics
- Adult Outpatient Providers in the New Mexico Public Mental Health Network:
- G. Medicine (Gallup): (505) 977-0110
- El Centro Family Health:
- Rio Arriba Health Commons (Española): (505) 753-7395
- Las Vegas Clinic (Las Vegas): (505) 425-6788
- Taos Clinic (Taos): (575) 758-3601
- Bond Street Clinic (Española): (505) 753-9503
- Coyote Clinic (Coyote): (575) 638-5487
- Truchas Clinic (Truchas): (505) 689-2461
- Highlands University Clinic (Las Vegas): (505) 454-3218
- La Loma Clinic (Anton Chico): (575) 427-5036
- Roy Clinic (Roy): (575) 485-2583
- San Miguel Clinic (Ribera): (575) 421-1113
- Springer Clinic (Springer): (575) 483-0282
- Wagon Mound Clinic (Wagon Mound): (575) 666-2288
- Embudo Clinic (Embudo): (505) 579-4255
- Peñasco Clinic (Peñasco): (575) 587-2205
- La Clinica Del Pueblo De Rio Arriba Behavioral Health (Tierra Amarilla): (575) 588-9506
- Mental Health Resources, Inc.:
- Crisis Line: (800) 432-2159
- Quay and Harding County Office (Tucumcari): (575) 461-3013
- New Mexico Behavioral Health Institute Community-Based Services:
- Las Vegas Office: (505) 454-5100 or (505) 425-1048
- Mora Office: (575) 387-2677
- Pecos Office: (505) 757-6112
- Santa Rosa Office: (575) 472-3068 or (505) 472-3768
- Open Skies Healthcare:
- Administrative Office (Albuquerque): (505) 345-8471
- Cibola County Office (Grants): (505) 285-3672
- Presbyterian Medical Services Behavioral Health:
- Counselor Clinic (Counselor): (575) 568-4328
- Cuba Health Center (Cuba): (575) 289-3291
- Cuba School-Based Health Center (Cuba): (575) 289-2082
- Española Family Wellness Center (Española): (505) 747-0081
- Farmington Community Health Center (Farmington): (505) 327-4796
- Gallup Teen Health Center (Gallup): (505) 721-2681
- Grants Family Counseling (Grants): (505) 876-1890
- Ojo Encino Clinic (Ojo Encino): (505) 731-2268
- Pecos Valley Medical Center (Pecos): (505) 757-6482 or (505) 757-6968
- Pecos Valley Medical Center School-Based Health Center (Pecos): (505) 757-6482
- Questa Health Center (Questa): (575) 586-0315
- Torreon Health Clinic (Torreon): (505) 731-2284
- Totah Behavioral Health Authority (Farmington): (505) 564-4804
- Valley Community Health Center (Espanola): (505) 747-7400
- Western New Mexico Medical Group (Thoreau): (505) 862-7417
- Western New Mexico Medical Group Behavioral Health (Gallup): (505) 863-3828
- San Juan Health Partners Behavioral Health (Farmington): (505) 609-6680
- The Mountain Center Counseling Services (Española, Santa Fe, and Tesuque): (505) 983-6158
- Taos Behavioral Health (Taos): (575) 758-4297
- Native American Mental and Behavioral Health Resources in Northern New Mexico:
- Acoma-Canoncito-Laguna IHS Service Unit (Acoma): (505) 552-5300
- Crownpoint IHS Health Care Facility (Crownpoint): (505) 786-5291
- Dzilth-Na-O-Dith-Hle Health Center (Bloomfield): (505) 960-7801
- Gallup Indian Medical Center (Gallup): (505) 722-1000
- Jicarilla IHS Service Unit (Dulce): (575) 759-3291
- Navajo Nation Division of Behavioral and Mental Health Services:
- Regional Behavioral Health Authority (Window Rock, AZ): (928) 871-6877
- Crownpoint Outpatient Treatment Center (Crownpoint): (505) 786-2111/2128
- Gallup Outpatient Treatment Center (Gallup): (505) 722-9470/9394
- Navajo Regional Behavioral Health Center (Shiprock): (505) 368-1429
- Shiprock Outpatient Treatment Center (Shiprock): (505) 368-1429
- Northern Navajo Medical Center (Shiprock): (505) 368-6001
- Pueblo of Zuni Recovery Center (Zuni): (505) 782-4710 or (505) 782-4717
- Taos-Picuris IHS Service Unit (Taos): (575) 758-6977
- Zuni Comprehensive Health Center (Zuni): (505) 782-4431
- Adult Outpatient Providers in the New Mexico Public Mental Health Network:
- Southern New Mexico Clinics
- Adult Outpatient Providers in the New Mexico Public Mental Health Network:
- A New Hope Therapy Center (Las Cruces): (575) 556-9585
- Amador Health Center Behavioral Health (Las Cruces): (575) 527-5482
- Border Area Mental Health Services:
- Las Cruces Office: (575) 522-7260
- Silver City Office: (575) 388-4497
- Deming Office: (575) 546-4497
- De Baca Family Practice Clinic Behavioral Health Services (Fort Sumner): (575) 355-2414
- Eastern New Mexico Medical Center Sunrise Mental Health Program (Roswell): (575) 622-8170
- Full Circle Recovery (Socorro): (505) 865-4140
- Guidance Center of Lea County (Hobbs): (575) 393-3168
- Hidalgo Medical Services Mental Health Services:
- Animas Valley Clinic (Animas): (575) 548-2742
- Bridges to Care (Silver City): (575) 597-0211
- Cliff-Gila Community Health Center (Gila): (575) 535-4384
- Cobre High School Clinic (Bayard): (575) 537-5069
- Community Health Center (Silver City): (575) 388-1511
- Ena Mitchell Senior Center (Lordsburg): (575) 542-9414
- Gila Senior Center (Gila): (575) 535-2888
- Lordsburg Clinic (Lordsburg): (575) 542-8384
Lordsburg High School Clinic (Lordsburg): (575) 542-3389 - Med Square Clinic (Silver City): (575) 388-1511
- Mimbres Senior Center (Mimbres): (575) 536-3990
- Mimbres Valley Clinic (Mimbres): (575) 536-3990
- New Beginnings (Silver City): (575) 538-3205
- Santa Clara Senior Center (Santa Clara): (575) 537-5254
- Silver City Senior Center (Silver City): (575) 597-2650
- Silver High School Clinic (Silver City): (575) 534-1015
- Tranquil Skies Community Mental Health Center (Silver City): (575) 388-4412
- Tu Casa (Silver City): (575) 597-2650
- La Casa Behavioral Health Services (Roswell): (575) 755-2272
- La Clinica De Familia Behavioral Health Services:
- Centennial High School Clinic (Las Cruces): (575) 525-4811
- Central Medical Integrated Clinic: (Las Cruces) (575) 528-6400
- East Mesa Integrated Clinic (Las Cruces): (575) 373-9202
- Las Cruces Behavioral Health (Las Cruces): (575) 647-2800
- Las Cruces Integrated Women’s Health Clinic (Las Cruces): (575) 532-2044 or (575) 525-4805
- Rio Grande Preparatory Institute Clinic (Las Cruces): (575) 525-4813
- Anthony Integrated Clinic (Anthony): (575) 882-5706
- Behavioral Health Anthony (Anthony): (575) 201-5136
- Chaparral High School Integrated Clinic (Chaparral): (575) 525-4815
- Chaparral Integrated Clinic (Chaparral): (575) 824-0820
- Desert Pride Academy Clinic (Anthony): (575) 674-2852
- Gadsden High School Clinic (Anthony): (575) 525-4817
- San Miguel Integrated Clinic (San Miguel): (575) 233-3830
- Santa Teresa High School Clinic (Santa Teresa): (575) 874-9338
- Sunland Park Integrated Clinic (Sunland Park): (575) 589-0887
- Mental Health Resources, Inc.:
- Crisis Line: (800) 432-2159
- Quay and Harding County Office (Tucumcari): (575) 461-3013
- DeBaca County Office (Ft. Sumner): (575) 769-2345
- Roosevelt County Office (Portales): (575) 359-1221
- Curry County Office (Clovis): (575) 769-2345
- New Mexico State University Counseling and Educational Psychology Clinic (Las Cruces): (575) 646-5365
- Open Minds (Alamogordo): (575) 489-4616
- Presbyterian Medical Services Behavioral Health:
- Alamogordo Family Health Center Behavioral Health (Alamogordo): (575) 437-7404
- Artesia Family Health Center (Artesia): (575) 746-9848
- Carlsbad Family Health Center Behavioral Health (Carlsbad): (575) 885-4836
- Carlsbad School-Based Health Center (Carlsbad): (575) 234-3319
- Catron County Medical Center (Reserve): (575) 533-6456
- Deming Behavioral Health Center (Deming): (575) 546-2174
- Quemado Health Center (Quemado): (575) 773-4610
- Ruidoso Behavioral Health Center (Ruidoso): (575) 630-0571
- Socorro High School Teen Health Center (Socorro): (575) 838-3199
- Socorro Mental Health (Socorro): (575) 835-2444
- Sierra Vista Hospital Counseling Center (Truth or Consequences): (575) 743-1380 or (575) 894-2111
- Southwest Family Guidance Center and Institute:
- Las Cruces Office: (575) 524-6820
- Native American Mental and Behavioral Health Resources in Southern New Mexico:
- Mescalero IHS Service Unit (Mescalero): (575) 464-4441
- Adult Outpatient Providers in the New Mexico Public Mental Health Network:
Most of these providers accept both public and private insurance and offer sliding-scale fees for people who don’t have insurance.
However, because providers can change their policies or level of participation in the public system, we can’t guarantee that every provider in this list will accept your insurance or offer a sliding scale.
We recommend calling the program you want to attend to confirm whether you’re eligible, what insurance plans they accept, and whether they offer any financial aid.
Also Consider: Federally Qualified Health Centers
Federally qualified health centers (FQHCs) are another great way to get affordable publicly-funded mental health services in New Mexico.
These federally-funded programs provide cutting-edge care in places where good primary healthcare was once hard to find. Most provide integrated care so you can get primary medical and mental health services at the same location. Each FQHC accepts Medicaid and Medicare and offers low sliding-scale fees if you don’t have insurance.
You can search for FQHCs near you by using the online search tool on the U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration website.
Troubleshooting Guide
The state mental health system is complicated and can be confusing to navigate. If you’re having any issues, we’re here to help. Here are some of our solutions to common problems you might experience.
Problems and Solutions
1. There’s a long waiting list.
New Mexico has a mental health crisis response system to help make sure you can get seen for essential services right away. However, if you’re not in crisis, you may have to wait before you can be seen by a therapist or other mental health provider.
Sometimes, it’s worth it to wait if you’ve found a good therapist or service. You can read our article on what to do before your first therapy session for tips on how to maintain your mental health while you wait.
If your symptoms are getting worse and you’re worried you can’t wait, you should call a state or local crisis line. The caring people who answer can help you figure out if you need help right away and can tell you where and how to get the level of care you need.
If you’re not in crisis but don’t want to wait, you can still call the New Mexico Crisis and Access Line to explore your other options. There may be another affordable program they could tell you about that could meet your needs but has a shorter waiting list.
2. You’re not eligible for state-funded services.
If you’re not eligible for Centennial Care or other financial support, you can still use your knowledge of the New Mexico mental health system to find affordable care.
Providers who participate in the system accept Centennial Care, but they also accept other kinds of insurance and offer sliding-scale fees. They often offer competitive rates and discounts compared to providers who don’t participate in the public system. So, you can use the directory above as a starting point in your search.
If you’re not finding mental health care that’s in your budget, ask around. Providers aren’t insulted if you tell them you need to find someone with lower rates. They may be familiar with other local resources and be able to tell you about other options you might want to try. Ask for information, resources, or even a direct referral to another provider.
3. The provider you’ve contacted is no longer part of the state system.
Except for the four community-based mental health locations run by New Mexico Behavioral Health Institute, New Mexico does not directly run any outpatient public mental health programs. Instead, it provides publicly-funded mental health services by making private providers part of the public network. In exchange for accepting public funding, these programs must accept public insurance plans.
The only difference it makes, really, if a provider stops participating in the public system, is they might not accept your insurance if you have Centennial Care. If the provider you’ve found no longer accepts your insurance, you can try another provider or go to your insurance plan’s website to find an up-to-date list of in-network providers.
4. You don’t like your therapist.
You should never accept bad therapy—or bad mental healthcare of any kind—for any reason. This is just as true in the public system as it is anywhere else. If you have a bad therapist, you should ask for a new one or look for another program.
If you’re not sure whether you have a bad therapist, you can read our articles on how to spot an unethical therapist and how to do a background check on a therapist. If you don’t like your therapist but wonder if it the problem might be fixable, you can read our articles, “What If I Don’t Like My Therapist?” and “How to Fix Problems with Your Therapist.”
If you don’t like the therapist you’re assigned, ask someone at the agency if they have a webpage or list of therapists you can review. You can read their bios and see if you think one might be a better match. You can also browse through other agencies and read the bios of the therapists that work there to help you decide if you’d like to switch agencies. You can read our article on how to choose a therapist for information on what to look for.
If you’ve run into a problem that we haven’t addressed, don’t give up. Call someone at the program (or the access line) and tell them what’s going on.
You’re much more likely to get the help you need when you advocate for yourself and are persistent. Tell the person you talk to what you need or what problem you’re having.
If they don’t help the first time, call them back and tell them. If you keep calling and keep calm and focused, you should eventually get through to someone who can help you.
Deep Dive: How Does the System Work?
To understand New Mexico’s mental health system, it helps to understand how it started and how it’s changed since then.
Public mental health services have been around for a surprisingly long time. But for over a hundred years in America, the only way to get them was in a psychiatric hospital.
DEEP DIVE
For More Information
To learn more about what the public mental health system was like in the early days—and how psychiatric inpatient care has evolved since then—you can read our article “Do Insane Asylums Still Exist? The Surprising Past and Present.”
To learn more about what inpatient mental health treatment is like now, and the differences between how it works in general hospitals and specialized psychiatric facilities, you can read our article “How Inpatient Mental Health Treatment Works.”
In the 1960s, Americans started thinking differently about mental health care. Conditions in psychiatric hospitals were getting worse and new medications made it possible to provide mental health treatment on an outpatient basis.
In response, new laws were passed that required state and local governments to establish community mental health programs as alternatives to institutionalization for people with serious mental illness. The most important was the Community Mental Health Act, which President John F. Kennedy signed into law in 1963.
DEEP DIVE
The New Mexico Behavioral Health Institute
The New Mexico Behavioral Health Institute is New Mexico’s only state-run psychiatric hospital and the oldest part of its mental health system. It was originally opened as the “Territorial Asylum for the Insane” in 1889, before New Mexico was even a state.
It has gone through many name changes and updates since then, but it still runs as a functioning inpatient psychiatric facility in Las Vegas, New Mexico. It accepts patients from all over the state. It runs several affiliated programs and facilities as well, including forensic, adolescent, long-term, and community-based mental health programs.
Its community-based mental health programs are the only state-run outpatient mental health programs in New Mexico. They offer specialty and intensive services that can be hard to find in private programs. They are designed to help people with severe mental health conditions receive the support they need outside of the hospital and in the community.
New Mexico founded some of its first community mental health programs in the 1960s. However, it did not establish a statewide mental health department or network until much later.
In the 1990s, New Mexico converted its mental health system into a regional system administered by three Medicaid managed care companies. It has restructured its system many times since.
In 2004, New Mexico passed a law that consolidated its system under the management of a single behavioral health managed care company. This change caused complications.
Since then, New Mexico has returned to its original approach and its system is now primarily administered by the three managed care companies that make up its Centennial Care program.
DEEP DIVE
Rebuilding New Mexico's Mental Health System
The New Mexico mental health system is still recovering from a significant shakeup that happened in 2013.
Citing “credible allegations of fraud,” the governor’s office froze Medicaid funding to 15 of the largest community-based mental health programs in New Mexico’s public network.
Though the attorney general later cleared the programs of fraud, the damage was done, and most of New Mexico’s established non-profit mental health providers had to close their doors and go out of business.
Since then, new laws have been established to protect the public mental health system. With these protections in place and with all lawsuits filed in response to the shutdown now settled, New Mexico is currently in the process of rebuilding its mental health network.
The New Mexico government continues to work on improving the public mental health system. The Behavioral Health Services Division and the Behavioral Health Collaborative, which manage the system on the state level, are actively recruiting new providers and expanding what services are available.
In the meantime, gaps are being filled by smaller non-profits, federally qualified health centers, and other integrated health clinics. If you’re having trouble finding accessible mental health care, these programs can be a great resource.
You can also call the New Mexico Crisis and Access Line at 1-855-NMCRISIS (662-7474). They know how the system works and will help you get where you need to go.
Conclusion
According to the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, only 47 percent of people in New Mexico who have mental health conditions get treatment for them.
You can make a difference by reaching out and connecting with local mental health resources to get the care you need. If you’re not sure whether the New Mexico public mental health system is for you, call the the New Mexico Crisis and Access Line or apply for Centennial Care. You may find out you can get mental health services through a publicly-funded program or another affordable option nearby.
The most important thing is to get started—the help you need may be only a call or click away.
Are You Thinking of Online Therapy? Start Here to Get Matched with a Licensed Therapist Right For You.
Therapy with No Waiting Rooms or Driving. Take a quick quiz about your preferences and needs and get matched to a therapist in as little as 48 hours.