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Pre Social Hour: The Abysmal State of Mental Health Care in this Country

Date and Time

Friday, October 3, 2025, 3:00 PM until 4:00 PM

Location

Ashby Village, Fellowship Hall
1953 Hopkins St, 1st Floor
Berkeley, CA  94707
USA
(510) 204-9200

Category

Pre-Social Hour Event

Registration Info

Registration is recommended

About this event


 

Rosenlicht
RSVP:  info@ashbyvillage.org or call 510-204-9200
When:   First Friday of the month, 3:00 - 4:00 pm
Where: Ashby Village, in the Fellowship Hall, 1953 Hopkins Street, Berkeley
Open to
Ashby Village members, volunteers and guests
Accessibility: use entrance on Hopkins Street


 
The Abysmal State of Mental Health Care in this Country: How and Why We Got Here and What We Can Do


Mental health care in America has become nothing short of atrocious. Supposed developments in treatment methods and medication remain inaccessible to those who need them most. Countless people seeking treatment are routinely funneled into homelessness and prison while a mental-health epidemic ravages younger generations. 


It seems obvious that the system is broken, but critics say the tragic truth is that it is actually functioning exactly as intended, providing reliably enormous profits for the entities who now manage mental health care. By taking a step back and examining how and why we developed our health-care system, with mental health care as the worst-case example of a dysfunctional model that has been abandoned by all other developed countries, we can understand our motives and actions, and chart a way out of our mess.


Nicholas Rosenlicht, M.D., is clinical professor at the University of California, San Francisco, School of Medicine in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences. He is founder of the San Francisco VA mood disorders program, has served on the Human Subjects Committee of the UCSF Human Research Protection Program, and is a member of the UCSF Academy of Medical Educators. He has more than 40 years of clinical, research, administrative, and teaching experience, and is the author of more than 30 peer-reviewed publications. Most recently he is the author of My Brother's Keeper: The Untold Stories Behind the Business of Mental Health—and How to Stop the Abandonment of the Mentally Ill.


Number of People Who Will Attend

Everyone
(No Fee)
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