Families, workers, and children are struggling long before they qualify for crisis care, often without timely, affordable, or appropriate access to therapy.
Teton Behavior Therapy Group exists to bridge that gap—providing early, affordable, community-based mental health care so fewer people reach crisis and more people receive support that truly fits their lives.
Teton Behavior Therapy – Nonprofit Initiatives
While Teton Behavior Therapy accepts most insurance plans — including Medicaid and Medicare — reimbursement rates alone cannot sustain the level of access our community now requires. Rising deductibles, increasing uninsured and underinsured residents, workforce housing displacement, and limited Medicaid reimbursement place significant pressure on traditional private practice models.
Many private practices do not participate in public insurance due to these constraints. We have chosen to do so — and to remain independent — because of access matters. The nonprofit structure allows us to continue accepting insurance while also building the financial flexibility necessary to expand scholarships, school partnerships, bilingual services, evening and weekend care, and workforce-based programming.
Mission
To expand equitable access to mental health support by strengthening prevention, early intervention, workforce wellbeing, and community-based programming beyond the limits of traditional reimbursement models.
Vision
A regional mental health ecosystem where access is not determined by income, insurance status, work schedule, language, or geography — and where support is available before crisis.
| A First Step | Stabilizing Support | Sustained Care | Partial Family Scholarship | Full Family Scholarship |
| 1-2 therapy sessions Helps a family begin care quickly | 2-4 therapy sessions Supports early momentum for a child or caregiver | 4-5 therapy sessions Helps families stay engaged long enough to see real progress | 6-8 therapy sessions Covers the majority of care for one family | 10 Therapy sessions Removes financial barriers to high-quality mental health care |
| $250 | $500 | $1,000 | $2000 | $3000 |

