Our partners
Make It OK is made possible by HealthPartners in partnership with these and many other groups.
To learn more about how Make It OK has positively impacted their organizations, visit our partner stories.
- Amery Hospital & Clinic
- Canvas Health
- Center for Community Health
- Crow Wing Energized
- Dakota County Public Health
- East Metro Mental Health Roundtable
- Goodhue County Public Health
- Guild Inc
- Healthier Together – Pierce and St. Croix Counties
- Hudson Hospital & Clinic
- Hutchinson Health
- Iowa Healthiest State Initiative
- Lakeview Hospital
- Melrose Center
- Mental Health Task Force of Polk County
- Mental Wellness Campaign Anoka County
- Minnesota Public Radio/APM
- NAMI Minnesota
- Northland Healthy Minds
- Olivia Hospital & Clinic
- Park Nicollet Foundation
- People Incorporated
- PrairieCare Hospital and Clinics
- Ramsey County Public Health
- Regions Hospital
- St. Cloud Wellbeing Initiative
- Twin Cities Public Television
- University of Minnesota Boynton Center
- University of Wisconsin Stevens Point
- Washington County Public Health and Environment
- Westfields Hospital & Clinic
You can partner to help Make It OK
Make a difference in your organization or community by taking action today. Launch a Make It OK campaign to raise awareness about mental health and illness stigma. Support those in your community living with a mental illness by starting caring and informed conversations.
Equity for all communities
In 2020 Make It OK paused to listen, learn and refocus the campaign to target the mental health of everyone, not just those living with a mental illness. The impact of COVID-19 and the growing racial justice movement continue to weigh on us all, especially when layered with the mental illness stigma. These factors create even more isolation and a reluctance to seek treatment, particularly among people of color, men and those who’ve never sought mental health care. Make It OK continues to grow our partners, ambassadors and community engagement with a priority on communities disproportionately impacted by mental illnesses and stigma.