Live With The 19th: Prioritizing Mental Health

Cover Photo

May

11

4:50pm

Live With The 19th: Prioritizing Mental Health

By The 19th News

The past two years have damaged the mental health of millions of Americans. Data shows women, LGBTQ+ people, and people of color are feeling this impact particularly acutely. An increasing number of people are reporting symptoms of anxiety and depression. Overdoses in the United States have hit record highs but counterintuitively, suicides actually went down a bit in 2020. And while the mental health care system is overwhelmed with patients seeking help, professional care remains inaccessible to many across the country.
For Mental Health Awareness Month, The 19th and State of Mind, a project of Slate magazine and Arizona State University, will host practical and frank conversations about the mental health crisis facing the United States. We’ll talk to practitioners about how people can prioritize their own mental health, examine bipartisan legislation seeking to address the crisis, and explore dealing with grief — something so many are working through after two years of significant loss.
👉 Click RSVP NOW at right to let us know what questions you have for our panelists.

About Our Speakers

Senator Tammy Baldwin (@SenatorBaldwin) is a Democrat representing Wisconsin, a position she has held since 2013. Before serving in the Senate, she was the U.S. Representative of Wisconsin’s 2nd District. In 2019, Sen. Baldwin co-sponsored the National Suicide Hotline Designation Act to create a three-digit number for Americans in crisis. It passed in Congress and became law in 2020. The 988 dialing code will become available nationally in July.
Torie Bosch (@TheKiBosch) is the editor of State of Mind, a partnership of Slate and Arizona State University that covers mental health. Bosch is also editor of Future Tense, a partnership of Slate, Arizona State University, and New America that explores the intersection of technology, science, policy, and society.
Dr. Joy Harden Bradford (@HelloDrJoy) is a licensed psychologist. She’s the host of the mental health podcast, Therapy for Black Girls. Her work focuses on making mental health topics more accessible for Black women, and she uses pop culture to illustrate psychological concepts.
Dr. Kristen L. Eckstrand is a board-certified child and adolescent psychiatrist. They’re also assistant professor of psychiatry at the University of Pittsburgh. Dr. Eckstrand has published four text books and several peer-reviewed papers on the health needs of LGBTQ+ communities.
Rebecca Soffer (@RebeccaSoffer) is cofounder of Modern Loss, a global movement offering creative, meaningful, and practical content and community addressing the long arc of grief. She is also author of "The Modern Loss Handbook: An Interactive Guide to Moving Through Grief and Building Your Resilience" and coauthor of "Modern Loss: Candid Conversation about Grief. Beginners Welcome."
Leslie Gray Streeter (@LeslieStreeter) is the author of “Black Widow,” a memoir about love, loss, grief and healing. She is a journalist, speaker, grief advocate and lifestyle columnist for the Baltimore Banner.
Amanda Becker (@AmandaBecker) is The 19th’s Washington correspondent.
Jayo Miko Macasaquit (@JayoMiko) is The 19th’s Chief People Officer.

Thank you to our sponsor

📷
Note: our sponsors play no part in the selection of our event participants or programming.

Accessing our events

All events from The 19th contain professional captioning. While we hope you can watch this event with us live, a video recording will also be available right after the original stream. Just RSVP for access.

About The 19th

📷
The 19th is an independent nonprofit newsroom reporting at the intersection of gender, politics and policy. We aim to empower women, people of color and the LGBTQ+ community with the information, community and tools they need to be equal participants in our democracy. The 19th aims to level the playing field with:
  • Free-to-consume and free-to-republish journalism that reimagines politics and policy coverage through a gender lens
  • Deep-dive, evidence-based reporting that exposes gender inequity and injustice, and reveals surprising and original stories on the issues that most deeply affect our readers’ lives, from health care to the economy
  • A newsroom that reflects the nation’s diversity, and is devoted to covering all people with empathy
  • A digital platform for civil conversations and community building, and national events that bring our readers into direct contact with their elected officials
The 19th aims to be a home for all people affected by the issues we cover. To that end, all members of our community are expected to observe our community guidelines when engaging on our website, newsletters, social channels, events or other platforms.
Learn how you can support our nonprofit newsroom here.

Sign up

The 19th's virtual events aim to bring women and people marginalized based on their gender together with elected officials, experts and community leaders to discuss issues at the intersection of gender, politics and policy. Visit 19thnews.org/subscribe to receive invitations for future 19th events.

hosted by

The 19th News

The 19th News

share

Open in Android app

for a better experience