Under the leadership of former First Lady Rosalynn Carter, the Carter Center's Mental Health Program has increased awareness about mental health issues, informed public policy, and reduced stigma and discrimination against those with mental illnesses.
Through the annual Rosalynn Carter Symposium on Mental Health Policy, the Center has brought a more united voice to a traditionally divided field, bringing together health leaders, national organizations, and other key stakeholders to build consensus on critical policy issues such as veterans' mental health, children's access to mental health services, and stigma and mental illness.
One of the major successes the program witnessed during the past decade has been the passage of mental health and addiction parity legislation - an important statement that these diseases should be treated like any other physical illness.
The Center also has worked on the local level in Georgia to provide community-supported solutions for improving the state's crumbling mental health care systems.
While working to defeat stigma and discrimination against people with mental illnesses at the policy level, recipients of the Center's Rosalynn Carter Fellowships for Mental Health Journalism work to counter myths, misperceptions, and stigma about these disorders in the public arena through the mass media.
"The attitudes about mental illness are changing," Rosalynn Carter said. "I've been working on this issue for more than 40 years, and I think even stigma is improving some."
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