Children & Youth Crisis Support (Global)

Children and Youth Crisis Support Global banner

Children & Youth Crisis Support (Global)

This page is designed to help children, teens, young people, families, carers, and trusted adults find crisis support that feels safer, clearer, and more age-appropriate. Young people often need support that recognises their stage of life, communication style, and the people around them.

Below you’ll find support ideas for children, youth, families, and trusted adults, along with pathways that can later connect to region-based services, topic pages, and more specialised support if needed.

Please note: This page is a guidance and navigation hub. If a child or young person is in immediate danger, at risk, or needs urgent help, contact local emergency services or an urgent crisis line right away.

Find Support That May Fit Better

Use the search box or filter to narrow down the support options on this page. This will become even more useful as you add your final internal links and trusted resources.

Tip: this page works best as an easy starting point that helps people move toward the support pathway that fits them.

For Children

Child-Friendly Crisis Support

Some children need support that is calm, simple, reassuring, and designed around their age and understanding. Child-friendly help may involve family, trusted adults, safe language, and gentle explanations.

For Youth & Teens

Youth-Focused Helplines & Support

Teens and young people may want support that feels direct, private, and age-appropriate. This can include youth helplines, text/chat services, school-linked support, and community youth organisations.

For Families & Carers

Support for Parents, Carers & Whānau

Families and carers often need guidance too. Support may include understanding warning signs, knowing who to contact, helping a young person stay safe, and finding support for the whole family system.

Trusted Adults

Guidance for Trusted Adults

Teachers, relatives, mentors, coaches, and other trusted adults can play an important role. Sometimes a young person first opens up to someone they feel safe with rather than a formal service.

Access & Pathways

Global, Local & Regional Pathways

Support may look different depending on location. This page can connect later to your global, regional, and local support hubs so families and young people can find help that is closer to home.

Schools & Community

Schools, Youth Workers & Community Support

For many young people, support may come through schools, wellbeing teams, youth workers, counsellors, or community groups. These spaces can become key pathways to further help.

No results matched that search yet. Try a different keyword or set the filter back to “All Categories.”

Support for Children

Children may not always have the words to explain what they are feeling. Support often needs to be gentle, simple, and grounded in safety, comfort, and trusted relationships.

What may help children

  • Safe, calm adults who listen and stay present
  • Simple language and reassurance
  • Child-friendly crisis or emotional support services
  • Family or caregiver involvement where appropriate
  • Support through school, health, or community services
  • Help that reduces fear, shame, or confusion

Why age-appropriate support matters

Children often need help that matches their emotional development and communication style. A response that is too complex, too clinical, or too rushed may feel overwhelming rather than supportive.

Pages like this can help adults find calmer starting points and clearer next steps.

Support for Youth & Teens

Young people may want support that feels private, respectful, and relevant to their world. Some prefer texting, online chat, peer-aware support, or services that understand youth culture and pressure.

Youth Helplines

Add future youth helplines here, including phone, text, and webchat services that are designed for teens and young people.

Safe Online Pathways

Some young people find it easier to reach out through chat or digital support first, especially if speaking out loud feels hard.

School & Community Links

Trusted staff, school wellbeing teams, youth workers, and community organisations can all become important first contact points.

Gentle reminder: if a young person talks about immediate harm, danger, or suicide risk, urgent local crisis support should come first.

For Families, Carers & Trusted Adults

Supporting a child or teenager in crisis can feel overwhelming. Parents, carers, relatives, whānau, and trusted adults may need practical guidance as well as emotional support.

Parents & Carers

Knowing Where to Start

Add future guidance or links here for caregivers who need help understanding options, warning signs, and first steps during a difficult moment.

Trusted Adults

What to Say & What to Avoid

You may later want to link to pages that help adults respond with calm, validation, and practical support rather than panic, blame, or pressure.

Community Support

Family & Wider Support Networks

Sometimes help also comes from extended family, community groups, cultural networks, youth leaders, or trusted services already involved in a young person’s life.

A Safer Place to Begin

When a child or young person is struggling, finding the right support can feel like a lot. This page is here to make that first step feel more manageable.

If you are unsure where to go next

Start with the section that feels closest to your situation. You can then move to more specific pages by topic, location, neurodivergence, culture, or community as your support hub grows.