(7-1-19) Long-time NAMI advocate Bob Carolla returned from the organization’s 2019 convention with this report. Full disclosure: I am a life time member of NAMI and support it monthly.
NAMI’s Convention: Our Movement, Our Time: A report by Bob Carolla
The National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) celebrated the 40th anniversary of its founding at its national convention in Seattle, June 19-22.
Twenty years ago, I remember vividly that there was a sense that the mental health community was on the verge of a new horizon—a next level. The landmark U.S. Surgeon General’s Report on Mental Health had just been published; it framed mental health and mental illness as parts of a single continuum, identified “parity” between physical and mental health insurance benefits as a critical need, and made stigma a public health issue. The Academy Award-winning movie A Beautiful Mind was in the works.
Change comes incrementally.
It’s often hard to see at any one moment in time. But in the past 20 years there has been more progress than many of us realize. There have been advances in medical research, greater public awareness and openness about mental health conditions, enactment of a national parity law, state expansions of Medicaid and a growing focus on early intervention and prevention.
There is still much work to be done, but I believe we are again on the verge of a new horizon—a next level with more progress.
Like the rest of the country, NAMI and others in the mental health organizations are experiencing generational changes. New technology, new leaders, new structures and new alliances are starting to emerge. We may not be able to see it yet, but I feel it, as surely as I felt the beginning of recovery and renewal after being diagnosed with bipolar depression 25 years ago.