This is the final segment of my interview with Mary Giliberti, the new executive director of the National Alliance on Mental Illness. As explained in parts one and two, I submitted my questions in writing and she replied in emails because of a personal scheduling problem that prevented me from meeting with her during her first week in office. I want to publicly thank Director Giliberti for taking time to answer my questions and I want to wish her the best, as a NAMI member, as she leads our organization forward.
Question: What do you see as the most important issue facing NAMI today?
Giliberti: We currently have systems that fail people with mental illness in healthcare, mental healthcare, education, housing, employment and criminal justice. We have too many people that are experiencing terrible outcomes and no one is held accountable. In fact, the incentives are often completely the opposite of what they should be.
Within our community, we have to come together to make progress towards our broader, shared mission. We must work together to fight the real battle—a society that by-and-large does not understand mental illness and has neglected to identify it as the priority it should be. We have to be strong to be able to change this and make mental illness a priority. There is much more that unites us than divides us.
In the short run, I will strive to help NAMI move forward with a clearly articulated vision and a strategic plan with specific goals to guide our work. As part of that process, I will engage with NAMI members, our state and local NAMI Affiliate leaders, our national staff, thought leaders in the area of serious mental illness, major supporters and others touched by mental illness with the goal of introducing myself, learning from them and developing a common understanding of the path ahead.
In the longer term, I will know that we have been successful when NAMI becomes identified not just as an organization, but also as a movement.