Former President Jimmy Carter Leaves Behind a Legacy of Mental Health Advocacy

Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter were lifelong activists for improving and expanding mental health care access for Americans.

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Former President Jimmy Carter, who died at the age of 100 on Dec. 29, charted a more than 70-year legacy that began with his Navy service and continued into the present day with his international conflict resolution group, the Carter Center. While Carter is famously remembered for his decades of work with Habitat for Humanity and for pursuing global peace with his center, the 39th president also leaves behind a history of advocating for mental health care, often spearheaded by his wife of 77 years, Rosalynn, who died in 2023 at age 96.

This work includes pushing for Community Mental Health Centers (CMHCs) in Georgia as governor, creating the Presidential Commission for Mental Health (PCMH) in 1977, signing the Mental Health Systems Act (MHSA) in 1980, and working with the Carter Center, which won the American Psychiatric Association’s (APA) Organizational Distinguished Service award in 2001. “He probably wanted nothing more than friendship and recognition, yet he was different, and when I heard him, my impulse was to flee,” she wrote in her memoir. The experience made Rosalynn empathetic towards those suffering from mental health issues and inspired her to spend much of her time during her husband’s presidency advocating for mental health care.



As governor of Georgia, Carter created the Governor’s Commission to Improve Services to the Mentally and Emotionally Handicapped and made Rosalynn a member. The PCMH spent a year studying the nation’s health care needs before submitting its results in 1978. Two years later, it influenced the MHSA, which was backed by Sen.

Ted Kennedy (D-Mass.) and Rep. Henry Waxman (D-Calif.

). The commission’s final report determined that there was a notable lack of mental health services in rural areas, inadequate care for children, adolescents, seniors, and those with chronic conditions, and diminished support for those with different cultural traditions and languages. In May 1979, Rosalynn became the first sitting U.

S. First Lady to speak before the World Health Assembly about the PCMH’s findings and her ongoing work to reduce stigma toward mental health care in the United States. Later that year, she urged Hollywood leaders in Los Angeles to tell positive stories about mental health to reduce stigma against those who suffer.

In 1985, the Emory University School of Medicine in Atlanta hosted the first Rosalynn Carter Symposium on Mental Health Policy called “Stigma and the Mentally Ill.” She then established the Carter Center Mental Health Program in 1991 before writing a book titled, “Helping Someone with Mental Illness: A Compassionate Guide for Family, Friends, and Caregivers” in 1998. Both Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter won the APA’s Organizational Distinguished Service Award in 2001.

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