Prince Harry and Meghan, Duke and Duchess of Sussex, opened the Project Healthy Minds’ fourth annual World Mental Health Day Festival in New York City by emphasizing a powerful theme that emerged from the last three years of their foundation’s work: mental health is fundamentally a community responsibility, not an individual challenge.
As the world’s largest gathering on World Mental Health Day, the all-day festival featured programming led by prominent voices in mental health, wellness, and culture, designed to destigmatize conversations and reshape the future of care. The Archewell Foundation sponsored three panels throughout the festival’s programming.
Community as the Foundation for Healing
Prince Harry started the morning’s programming with an introduction that noted the widespread nature of our global mental health crisis. “These are not separate problems for separate people,” he said. “They are interlocking injuries to our global community. Mental health is shaped by public health, foreign policy, climate policy, corporate design, and economic choices. Too often, decisions made by a few powerful actors ripple across the planet and into every aspect of our lives.”
Prince Harry also pointed out that our digital world has “fundamentally changed how we experience reality—young people exposed to relentless comparison, harassment, misinformation, and an attention economy designed to keep us scrolling at the expense of sleep and real human contact.”
Following Prince Harry’s opening remarks, a panel moderated by Jiore Craig and sponsored by the foundation, explored youth in the digital age with Ailen Arreaza, the executive director of ParentsTogether, Jayla Stokesberry, a research assistant at Hopelab, Isabel Sunderland, policy lead at Design It For Us, and Katie S., a junior in high school. The conversation centered the experience of youth with social media as well as the potential for impact when young people become activists to change policy at the local, state, and national level.
The Duchess then introduced a panel featuring social psychologist Jonathan Haidt’s examination of how technology rewired childhood and caused an international mental health crisis with Amy Neville, community manager of The Parents’ Network and Kirsten Ryan a parent advocate, moderated by journalist Katie Couric.
The Duchess shared insights drawn from The Archewell Foundation’s work across multiple communities experiencing crisis and trauma. Their observations centered on a consistent pattern: the most effective healing emerged not from services alone, but from communities of shared experience.
“Three years ago, we met families whose worlds had shattered. Parents who had lost children to social media-driven suicide. Others watching their kids struggle with depression, anxiety, and self-harm linked to online platforms,” she said. “What began as individual tragedies became the foundation for The Parents’ Network, a community that grew from a small pilot in November 2022 to a global support system serving families across three countries by August 2024.”
She emphasized that bereaved parents required more than traditional therapy. “The parents who lost children to social media didn’t just need therapy; they needed other parents who understood their specific grief,” the Duchess explained. “When these parents came together, they weren’t just sharing stories, they were creating a movement. Utilizing trauma-informed practices, parents created strong bonds and offered healing support through community. They turned their grief into advocacy, They turned their grief into advocacy when they let love fuel their fight for change.”
The Duchess also outlined how this principle of community-driven healing manifested across The Archewell Foundation’s initiatives. Their partnership with Girls Inc. and #HalfTheStory reached young girls in underserved communities, addressing body image and online safety while building networks of resilience.
The Foundation sponsored an additional panel focused on mental health during humanitarian crises. Throughout the day, the Lost Screen Memorial was featured at both the front entrance and rooftop of the festival, serving as a visual reminder of the lives affected by online harms.
A Call to Collective Action
This marked the second time the Duke and Duchess supported Project Healthy Minds’ World Mental Health Day events. The organization is a Millennial and Gen Z-driven mental health tech nonprofit dedicated to expanding access to mental health services across the United States. Its programmatic initiatives serve more than 200,000 people annually. In 2023, The Archewell Foundation produced conversations with The Parents’ Network families about social media’s impact on youth.
All this work was highlighted during the Project Healthy Minds Gala the previous night, where the Duke and Duchess were honored as Humanitarians of the Year. As Laura Marquez-Garrett, an attorney with the Social Media Victims Law Center, noted, “You didn’t just create a support network. You created and sustained a movement with your kindness and refusal to give up. You made the world a better and safer place, in a way that will never stop giving no matter what happens next.”
The Duchess concluded with a call to recognize mental health as a shared responsibility. “While the research is sobering, the solutions are within reach—especially when parents, advocates, and communities come together.”
John Shearer for The Archewell Foundation, Getty Images for Project Healthy Minds