Patrick Kennedy Highlights DU’s Work to Redefine Mental Health
The Graduate School of Professional Psychology is changing the ways we treat and talk about mental health
Patrick Kennedy very easily could not have been on the History Colorado Center stage last week. Had things gone slightly differently on a fateful night in 2006, he wouldn’t be leading the charge to improve mental health and substance abuse care.
A few inches one way or the other and he would be in jail.
But instead of driving his car into a capitol security guard that night in Washington, D.C., more than a decade ago, then-Congressman Kennedy collided with reality.
“No one ever chooses to be public with their addiction or their mental illness,” said Kennedy, who was under the influence of prescription drugs when his car hit a barricade on Capitol Hill. “It’s still so negative and pejorative to wear the label of ‘addict, alcoholic, mentally ill person, bipolar’ that no one is really the one who volunteers this. In my case, obviously, it came in the wake of an arrest.”
Against the desires of his father, the legendary late Sen. Ted Kennedy, Patrick chose to go public. In the years since, the former Democratic representative from Rhode Island has drawn on his life experiences — as a cocaine user, alcoholic and OxyContin abuser with bipolar disorder — on a crusade to redefine mental health in this country.
In February, he led a community conversation, hosted by the University of Denver's Graduate School of Professional Psychology, aimed at taking on the stigma mental health and addiction can carry.
“I never cease to be amazed in the way even my judgment gets in the way of reaching out to people who need help, even though I’d like to think of myself as someone who is compassionate and open-minded,” Kennedy said. “But it just reminds me how deep this is in all of us, this bias and prejudice against those who behave and act in a way that startles us, that unnerves us, that makes us feel uncomfortable and makes us step away in fear.”