Pooja Mehta on mental illness advocacy as a South Asian American woman
Manage episode 431690433 series 3442258
Pooja Mehta serves with me on the National Board of Directors at the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI). She’s been a powerful mental health advocate since she was 19 and lives with anxiety with auditory hallucinations, depression, and lost her brother Raj to suicide in 2020.
Hear from her on:
- How she centers being a South Asian woman in her advocacy
- What current suicide prevention efforts miss
- An annual tradition in honor of her brother, Raj, to foster kindness and connectedness
- How to craft a lived experience message to drive policy change
Trigger warning: In this episode, we talk about death by suicide, suicidal ideation, anxiety, auditory hallucinations, and depression.
Transcript here. Video conversation here.
—
SPREAD THE LIGHT WITH DR DEVIKA B:
Because stigma festers in the dark and scatters in the light.
* Join our well-being newsletter community that examines evidence-based trends in health, innovation, and culture, and destigmatizes mental illness — centering lived experience, equity, justice, and cross-cultural nuances: askdrdevikab.substack.com
You'll also find written versions of this interview and others like it there — and links to relevant sources.
* More video interviews like this one: youtube.com/@drdevikab
* Website: www.devikabhushan.com
* Twitter: www.twitter.com/DrDevikaB
* Instagram: www.instagram.com/drdevikab
* TikTok: www.tiktok.com/@drdevikab
* LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/devika-bhushan-md-faap-183702149
If you or a loved one needs help for a mental health crisis in the US, don’t hesitate to call or text 988 — or reach them online here. Find other resources here, search for a treatment facility here, and find a therapist here. Here are resources specifically for LGBTQ people. If you’re a US-based clinician or health student dealing with “any issue, not just a crisis,” reach out to the Physicians Support ...
18 episodes