Schwartz briefed National Press Foundation fellows in May 2024: Mental Health Benefits Help Bottom Line, Too. 

Betsy Schwartz drives the advancement of mental health by working with organizations and philanthropists to build or expand their capacity to grow evidence-based mental health services. Her exemplary career enables her to facilitate scaling an organizational infrastructure to bring initiatives and public policy into action and to expand their programs. This includes assessment of human and financial resources, design options and business models and culminates in optimal strategies. External strategy includes the exploration of partnerships, influencer support, and revenue sources.

Schwartz draws upon her years of mental health experience at the local, state, and national levels. As a leader in mental health public policy, she has a track record of designing and implementing legislative action. As CEO of a nonprofit organization, she has practical knowledge for mobilizing board members, empowering professional teams, and garnering private funding.

Schwartz has demonstrated the power of community engagement to solve complex problems. Noteworthy examples of this work resulted in the creation of the first ever mental health unit in the Houston Police Department and a multi-year stakeholder consensus building strategy that transformed the Houston juvenile justice system. Schwartz has a hands-on understanding of how to respond to mental health issues including crisis care, maternal mental health, public awareness initiatives.

On a national level, as Vice President of Public Education at the National Council for Wellbeing she led the expansion of Mental Health First Aid (MHFA). MHFA is a public education program taught throughout the USA and in 30 countries.

She is a Senior Fellow with the Harvard University Advanced Leadership Institute and a Senior Fellow of the American Leadership Forum and WK Kellogg Foundation National Leadership Alliance. Among her numerous awards, Schwartz received the Houston Psychological Association’s Public Citizen of the Year and the Houston Chronicle Women on the Move. Her volunteer work includes membership on multiple local and state boards of directors and President of the Board of the Houston Coalition for the Homeless. She has a Masters in Social Work Administration from the University of Houston and a Bachelor’s of Science from University of Denver.