LOUISVILLE, Ky. (OSV News) — The U.S. bishops launched a mental health initiative last year that one of their leaders says has had a “tremendous response.”
Bishop Robert E. Barron of Winona-Rochester, Minnesota, who heads the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ Commission on Laity, Marriage, Family Life and Youth, updated his fellow bishops on the National Catholic Mental Health Campaign at the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ 2024 Spring General Meeting on June 13.
The gathering, part of the annual fall and spring General Synod, where bishops convene to conduct business and discuss a variety of canon law and civil issues, will be held June 12-14 in Louisville, Kentucky, with public sessions streamed live on the USCCB website June 13 and 14.
The USCCB’s mental health campaign was launched in October 2023 under the leadership of Bishop Barron and Archbishop Boris A. Gudziak of the Ukrainian Catholic Archdiocese of Philadelphia, who serves as chair of the USCCB’s National Justice and Human Development Committee.

Several organizations worked with Archbishop Gudziak and Bishop Barron on the campaign, including Catholic Charities USA, the Catholic Health Association, the National Catholic Partnership on Disability, the U.S. Society of St. Vincent de Paul, the National Catholic Youth Ministry League, the National Catholic Youth Ministry Network, the National Young Adult Ministry Institute and the Catholic Mental Health Chaplaincy Association.
In a message introducing the initiative, the two prelates said its goals were threefold: to raise awareness of the issue, to eliminate the stigma against people who suffer from mental illness and “to send a clear message to everyone that everyone who needs help should get it.”
Archbishop Gudziak (who was unable to attend the USCCB spring meeting due to a funeral overseas) recently told OSV News that “awareness is growing, and the dangers and burdens of mental health issues are more evident than ever before.”
According to the National Alliance on Mental Illness, roughly 60 million U.S. adults, or one in five, will experience a mental illness in 2021, with more than 14 million of those reporting severe symptoms and more than 19 million struggling with both substance abuse and mental illness simultaneously.
The country’s young people have been hit particularly hard: In 2021, U.S. Surgeon General Vivek H. Murthy issued recommendations on the issue, citing data showing that one in three high school students and half of girls felt persistent sadness or hopelessness in 2019, a 40 percent increase since 2009.
“There’s still a lot of stigma and fear about treating mental health in a holistic and specialized way,” Archbishop Gudziak said in an interview with OSV News in late May.
In his report to the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ spring meeting, Bishop Barron said that over the past few months, campaign organizers “have been holding roundtable discussions on two populations affected by mental health: young people and our clergy.”
“These conversations provided a foundation for many more roundtable discussions in the future,” Bishop said.
A recording of one such roundtable held March 19 is available on the USCCB website, and Bishop Barron said future sessions will also be made available online.
At the same time, he said, “the discussion, while useful, only scratches the surface of the crisis.”
The campaign “has really generated a lot of enthusiasm among the faithful,” Bishop Barron said, “and I’m convinced we’re starting something good here.”
He asked the bishops in attendance to focus their subcommittee discussions about the campaign on three points: their dioceses’ existing programs and activities that address mental health concerns, strategies the church can adopt to reduce the stigma associated with mental health issues, and ways “the prophetic voice of the church can advocate for individuals and families affected by mental health issues.”
Bishop Barron was joined in his report by Catholic Charities USA President and CEO Kelly Alice Robinson and Brian Corbin, CCUSA Vice President of Member Services.
Robinson said most of the 15 million people CCUSA assisted in the past year “experienced some kind of trauma,” which “makes them more likely to experience a mental health crisis or develop post-traumatic stress disorder.”
She cited several statistics from the 2022 KFF/CNN Mental Health in America survey, which found that 28% of families nationwide report having a family member who required in-person treatment for mental health distress, 21% have had a family member undergo emergency medical treatment for a drug overdose, 16% have lost a family member to suicide, and 16% have had a family member experience homelessness due to mental illness.
Robinson said being a “trauma-sensitive church” involves recognizing and being sensitive to the impact of trauma on families, helping parishioners “recognize their experiences of and responses to trauma,” and providing “resources for spiritual and professional recovery” in a variety of ways.
Corbin described some of those resources, including CCUSA’s Whole Hearted, a parish-based trauma-awareness support that integrates spirituality and religious practice with behavioral health, and CCUSA’s Hope, a pilot program developing a mental health chatbot.
The session also highlighted the experience of Bishop James D. Conley of Lincoln, Nebraska. In his May 2024 pastoral letter, “A Hopeful Future,” Bishop Conley shared his own struggle with depression and anxiety and how an integrative Catholic approach to mental health enabled him to return to priesthood after a leave of absence.
“Our dream is that all Catholics across the country will pray, discuss, learn and advocate for spiritual, mental and physical health in our dioceses,” Bishop Barron said.
Read more Bishops
Copyright © 2024 OSV News
printing