The Mirror Initiative
You can't fix mental health outcomes for men and boys if the people serving them don't reflect or understand them.
The Mirror Initiative is a national effort to improve mental health outcomes for men and boys by building a stronger pipeline of male mental health professionals and making health care systems more responsive and accessible to men — starting with scholarships, mentorship, and real conversations about masculinity.
(NAMI, 2024)
(APA, 2023)
"Men are increasingly suffering from economic anxiety, social isolation, and poor mental health — exacerbated by pressure to conform to restrictive masculine norms and a systemic lack of gender-sensitive support. By launching the Mirror Initiative, we're spurring important conversations about masculinity and encouraging men to enter the mental health field as professionals and as help-seekers."
— Dr. Daniel Singley, Chair, Mirror Initiative | Past President, APA Division 51 | Founder, The Center for Men's Excellence, San Diego
A silent crisis with a treatment gap we can no longer ignore
About 12.3 million American men experience mental illness each year — yet less than half receive any treatment. Male suicide rates are nearly four times higher than female rates. And the cultural pressures that prevent men from seeking help are compounded by a mental health system that often doesn't reflect or understand them.
We've spent years trying to get men to engage with mental health. Less attention has been paid to whether the system itself feels relatable or accessible to them. The Mirror Initiative addresses both sides of that equation.
Men once made up 80% of the psychology field. Today that ratio has reversed.
In the mid-1960s, men represented roughly 80% of the psychology field. Today, males make up just 28% of all psychologists — and that share is falling. Among psychologists under 30, fewer than 13% are male. The mean age of a male psychologist is 54, compared to 46 for female psychologists, meaning the disparity will deepen dramatically as older cohorts retire.
The result: the men who most need mental health support are served by a profession that increasingly doesn't represent or value their lived experience. This is not a criticism of women in psychology — it is a call to ensure men have practitioners who have learned the evidence-based tools that give greater insight and who understand how to support nearly half of the country's population.
Three pillars. One clear goal:
more men in psychology, better care for men.
Founded within APA Division 51 — the Society for the Psychology of Men and Masculinities — the Mirror Initiative is a first-of-its-kind national effort that addresses both the mental health crisis affecting men and the workforce imbalance driving it. When men see themselves reflected in a field, they're more likely to pursue it. We've seen that pattern play out elsewhere. This is the first time it has been tested intentionally with males in the mental health space.
Build the Pipeline
We fund and support young men entering psychology with $10,000 graduate scholarships for male-identifying psychology students. Reducing financial barriers is the first step to reshaping who enters the field. A national mentorship network coordinated through APA's Division 51 connects scholarship recipients with established practitioners and community leaders — providing visibility, support, and a clear professional pathway.
Increase Awareness
Our Campus Representatives program encourages students, staff, and academics to hold "lunch 'n learn" presentations to raise awareness that the psychology of men and masculinity is an important and well-established area of research and practice. By showing films and holding facilitated discussions on campus, Representatives can help move the needle even earlier in the academic pipeline to encourage participation in this area of psychology.
Increase Access
The research on men's mental health help-seeking is clear: they tend to avoid it whenever possible. Yet men are dying younger than women and die by suicide at alarming rates. We work to combat myths, stigma, and systems that discourage men's and boys' participation in mental health services. Through campus engagement, media, and national dialogue, we elevate conversations about healthy masculinity, the importance of balancing traditional characteristics with contemporary masculinity, and the role institutions can play in supporting healthier male identities.
How the initiative works on the ground
The insights gathered from this initial pilot program with five male-identified doctoral students in psychology will inform a replicable model designed to expand to universities nationwide.
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Five $10,000 Graduate ScholarshipsAwarded to male-identifying graduate psychology students, each including mentorship, structured engagement, and professional development.
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National Mentorship NetworkCoordinated through APA Division 51, connecting students with practitioners and leaders who understand both the field and the journey.
Scholarship recipients will take part in a series of webinars in which they will present their own research and clinical interests in the psychology of men and boys.
Note: The scholarship recipients for the 2026 pilot program have already been selected. Keep an eye out for future notices that we are soliciting more scholarship applications.
When people see themselves reflected in a field, they're more likely to pursue it. We've seen that in other areas. This hasn't really been tested in this space yet.
The benefits reach far beyond men alone
For Men
Young men gain visibility, mentorship, and community — along with a clear pathway into a field where male representation is urgently needed. Men in crisis gain practitioners who understand their experience.
For People of Other Genders
Strengthening men's emotional wellbeing contributes to healthier, more balanced relationships in every part of society.
For Children
Children thrive when the men in their lives have emotional capacity. Increasing male clinicians, mentors, and role models directly supports stronger outcomes for the next generation.
For Society
A more gender-balanced mental health workforce improves outcomes across communities. Addressing workforce disparities supports long-term stability in families, schools, workplaces, and public life.
This project is supported by
Want to get involved? Contact us if you'd like more information about partnering with the Mirror Initiative.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Mirror Initiative?
The Mirror Initiative is a national effort led by APA Division 51 — the Society for the Psychology of Men and Masculinities — to improve mental health outcomes for men and boys. It does this by increasing the number of men entering the psychology profession through scholarships and mentorship, by advancing campus and national dialogue about healthy masculinity and men's mental health, and by working to address health care systems that do not represent or adequately include men's health in their protocols.
Who is eligible for the scholarships?
The five $10,000 scholarships are for male-identifying graduate students who are actively pursuing careers in psychology. Recipients also receive mentorship, structured professional development, and connection to the national mentorship network coordinated through APA Division 51.
Note: The scholarship recipients for the 2026 pilot program have already been selected. Keep an eye out for future notices that we are soliciting more scholarship applications.
Why focus on increasing male psychologists specifically?
Research consistently shows that people are more likely to seek help from practitioners who reflect their identity and lived experience. Roughly 40% of men have a preference for their therapist's gender. With men making up just 28% of the psychology workforce — and less than 13% of psychologists under 30 — there is a structural mismatch between where the need is greatest and who is available to meet it. This is not a criticism of women — or people of other genders — in psychology; it is a call to expand representation so that men in crisis have access to practitioners who understand them.
How is the initiative funded?
The American Institute for Boys and Men has pledged $100,000 from its Melinda Gates Foundation funds to support the initiative. The initiative is fully funded and does not require financial contributions from partner universities. University partnerships focus on hosting, coordination, and co-creation — not funding.
Will the initiative expand beyond the inaugural pilot site?
Yes. The inaugural pilot site was selected to generate insights that travel to a wide range of institution types. Evaluation data, student outcomes, and best practices from this pilot will inform a replicable model designed to expand to universities nationwide. The goal is to build something that can scale: this is the start of a national movement, not a single event.
Ready to be part of the solution?
Whether you're a student, a university, a clinician, or a partner organization — the Mirror Initiative is building something that can scale. Let's build it together.