Posted on November 15, 2016
TIME Magazine
The number of teens with depression is increasing, but the number getting help is not. NAMI is involved seeking support in schools.
READ MOREPosted on November 11, 2016
New York Magazine
A lot of health-insurance plans have what are called “phantom networks” that claim to cover your needs, but fall short when help is needed. That's also the focus of a NAMI survey report released the same week as this story. (See press release).
READ MOREPosted on November 6, 2016
The Baltimore Sun
Thr Departmenyt of Defense's policy toward mental health coniditions is inconsistent, even as it tries to eliminate stigma that discourages people from seeking help The military still has much work to do. "e've barely scratched the surface.
READ MOREPosted on November 2, 2016
The News Review
A man who has lived with schizophrenia for 11 year experiences a turn for the better thanks to practical application of NAMI's Engagement Initiative, defined as “winning and keeping trust, expressing that you care.” The story illustrates how NAMI works.
READ MOREPosted on November 2, 2016
News-Review
A story that involves NAMI's national Engagement Report and a view from the grassroots in Rosburg, Oregon.
Engagement is defined as “winning and keeping trust, expressing that you care.”
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Posted on October 30, 2016
Hollywood A-listers, TV, and movies are dealing frankly with issues once hidden. NAMI's National Director of Communications & Public Affairs Katrina Gays offers three reasons.
READ MOREPosted on October 28, 2016
U.S. News & World Report
Do we like to scare people with other medical treatments such as chemotherapy or dialysis? NAMI CEO Mary Giliberti explains why stigmatizing Halloween costumes and haunted asylum attractions are public health problems.
READ MOREPosted on October 25, 2016
Washington Post
This storye--featured on page A3 of the Post and as the tabloid cover story for The Washington Express distributed in Metro stations throughout the DC area--desribes NAMI's Halloween Horrors campaign. It quotes NAMI CEO Mary Giliberti and several of NAMI's grassroots advocates.
READ MOREPosted on July 11, 2016
Dallas Morning News
Shootings, natural disasters and terrorist attacks affect first rresponders as surely as civilians. In the wake of the Dallas tragedy that left five police officers dead, the chief of police is responding tomental health concerns. NAMI's report on police mental health, released in April with the Department of Justice, is now being cited as a warning that too few police agencies have prepared to support personnel who experience psychological fallout from mass casualty events.
READ MOREPosted on July 10, 2016
Greenville Online (South Carolina)
NAMI and Alpha Kappa Alpha chapters natiowide are working together to increase mental health awareness in the African American community. African Americans comprise 12 percent of the population — the second-largest ethnic minority group in the United States — but they often receive disproportionately less and lower quality care than other communities for both medical and mental health services
READ MORENAMI HelpLine is available M-F, 10 a.m. – 10 p.m. ET. Call 800-950-6264,
text “helpline” to 62640, or chat online. In a crisis, call or text 988 (24/7).