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A Common Struggle: A Personal Journey Through the Past and Future of Mental Illness and Addiction

Page 42

by Patrick J. Kennedy


  stigma

  of depression, 169–70

  fighting, 12–13, 131, 341

  of mental illness, 30, 137, 152–53, 171

  shame and, 192, 263–64

  of substance abuse disorders, 30

  term “disorders” as, 351

  Stupak, Bart, 204

  Styron, William, 131

  Suboxone, 208–9, 215, 219–20

  Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), 108, 186, 225

  substance abuse disorders. See also alcoholism

  “bad parenting” and, 51

  as common problem, 269

  denial and, 155

  “Just Say No” and, 64–65

  mood disorders and, 172

  parity and, 142, 194–95

  perceptions of, 64–65, 247–48

  stages of, 72

  suicides

  antidepressants and, 143

  hotlines and, 85–86

  impediments to prevention of, 258–59

  initiative on, 164–65

  of military veterans, 268, 325–26

  narratives about, 139–40

  prevention of, 203–4, 205

  rate of, 228–29

  Sullivan, Barry, 300

  Sununu, John, 165

  Surgeon General’s report, 167

  Susman, Louis, 323, 358

  Sweeney, Dennis, 133–34

  Swift, Taylor, 353

  Szasz, Thomas, 113

  talk therapies, 143

  TARP. See Troubled Asset Relief Program

  Taylor, Charles, 322

  Teddy Kennedy Story, The (TV film), 77

  “Tedstrong” bracelets, 317

  tell-all books, 53–54

  Teng Hsiao-p’ing, 50

  terrorism, 193

  THC, 357–58

  Thirteen Days (film), 187

  Thomas, Clarence, 97–98

  Thompson, Hunter, 74

  Tiahrt,Todd, 205

  “tied” children, 372

  Time magazine, 109

  Today show, 331

  Torrey, E. Fuller, 110

  Townsend, Kathleen Kennedy (cousin), 187

  trauma-based illnesses, 129, 166–67, 268

  traumatic brain injury (TBI), 326, 334

  treatment limits, 285

  treatments. See also Alcoholics Anonymous; group therapy; medications; twelve-step programs

  approaches to, 264

  cognitive behavioral therapy as, 223

  collaboration in, 368–69

  day programs as, 226, 311

  electroconvulsive therapy as, 143–44, 311

  exercise as, 224

  gap in, 371

  geographic cure as, 273

  insights as goal of, 281

  legally mandated, 312

  medication-assisted, 209, 311

  outpatient and inpatient, 310–11

  partial hospitalization as, 226

  prayer meetings as, 271

  psychotherapy as, 223

  of schizophrenia, 341

  spiritual counseling as, 265

  talk therapies and, 143

  triggers, 280

  Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP), 293

  True Compass (Ted Kennedy), 314–15

  Tunney, John, 74

  Tutu, Desmond, 77

  twelve-step programs. See also Alcoholics Anonymous

  group sessions in, 47

  making amends in, 358–59

  medication in, 209, 339

  privacy and confidentiality in, 47–48, 222, 241

  slips and relapses in, 51

  steps of, 280–81

  21st Century Health Information Act, 218, 219

  Two Dreams (rehab center), 335

  Unquiet Mind, An (Wyatt), 130–31

  urine testing, 311, 312

  Very Special Arts, 349

  veterans, 129, 218, 268, 325–26

  Vieira, Meredith, 331

  Virginia Beach Psychiatric Center, 335

  Vivitrol, 312

  Volkow, Nora, 246, 248

  Wallace, Mike, 131, 162, 204, 226

  Walter Reed Army Medical Center, 268

  War on Cancer, 107

  War on Drugs, 64

  Washington Post, 130, 233

  Wellbutrin, 206

  Wellstone, Paul

  bill named for, 261–62

  brother of, 137–38, 139

  death of, 199

  on first mental health parity bill, 142

  parity bills of, 190, 194–95, 198, 259

  Wellstone, Stephen, 137–38

  West, Darrell, 178

  Whitaker, Eric, 298

  White House Conference on Mental Health, 160–63, 177

  White House meeting, 362–64

  Williams, Juan, 165

  Wilson, Heather, 277

  Winter, Steve, 257–58

  World Health Organization, 57, 216, 371

  World Psychiatric Association, 216

  Wounded Warrior Assistance Act, 268

  Wyatt, Richard J., 130–31

  Xanax, 78

  Young, Cornel, Jr., 174, 176

  ABOUT THE AUTHORS

  The Honorable Patrick J. Kennedy is a former member of the U.S. House of Representatives and the nation’s leading political voice on mental illness, addiction, and other brain diseases. During his sixteen-year career representing Rhode Island in Congress, he fought a national battle to end medical and societal discrimination against these illnesses, highlighted by his lead sponsorship of the Mental Health Parity and Addictions Equity Act of 2008—and his brave openness about his own health challenges. The son of Senator Edward “Ted” Kennedy, he decided to leave Congress not long after his father’s death to devote his career to advocacy for brain diseases and to create a new, healthier life and start a family. He has since founded the Kennedy Forum, which unites the community of mental health, and co-founded One Mind, a global leader in open science collaboration in brain research. He lives in New Jersey with his wife, Amy, and their three (soon to be four) children.

  www.patrickjkennedy.net

  Stephen Fried is an award-winning magazine journalist, a bestselling author, and an adjunct professor at Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. He is the author of two books on healthcare, mental health, and addiction—Bitter Pills: Inside the Hazardous World of Legal Drugs, and Thing of Beauty: The Tragedy of Supermodel Gia—as well as The New Rabbi, Husbandry, and his recent historical biography Appetite for America: Fred Harvey and the Business of Civilizing the Wild West—One Meal at a Time, which was a New York Times bestseller. Fried lives in Philadelphia with his wife, author Diane Ayres.

  www.stephenfried.com

  * I want to thank the Mood Disorders Association of Ontario, which coined this phrase and allows me to use it freely in my talks and writing.

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