Rosalynn Carter Mental Health Fellows Help Communities Coping with COVID-19

During the pandemic, Carter Center fellows have reported on managing coronavirus anxiety, the challenges of the mental health care system at this time, tips from mental health experts on staying mentally well, how the virus is impacting people experiencing homelessness and more.

“The Carter Center Mental Health Program is committed to promoting mental health and well-being during the pandemic,” said Dr. Eve Byrd, program director.

“We’re disseminating reliable information that promotes the mental health of the general public, journalists, and vulnerable populations around the world, and also monitoring state and federal policy that affects people’s access to mental health care now and beyond,” Byrd added.

The Carter Center Mental Health Program also works closely with Cox Media Group and Atlanta ABC affiliate WSB-TV on weekly news segments on mental health and COVID-19, using the Rosalynn Carter Mental Health Task Force’s wealth of knowledge.

About the Rosalynn Carter Mental Health Journalism Fellowships

The Carter Center’s Rosalynn Carter Fellowships for Mental Health Journalism support a diverse cohort of journalists from Latin America, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, and United States. Fellows are deeply committed to exploring some of society’s biggest mental health challenges.

The program was founded in 1996 by former First Lady Rosalynn Carter to give journalists the resources they need to report on mental health and help dismantle through storytelling the stigma that millions of people face every day.

Over the past two decades, more than 220 journalists from New Zealand, Romania, South Africa, and current participating countries have been awarded the highly competitive fellowships. Fellows work within their newsrooms and beyond to report on mental health challenges and transform their communities — and lives — in the process.

Journalists in the United Arab Emirates can apply for fellowships through The National here. Journalists in Latin America can apply through Universidad de la Sabana and the GABO Foundation here.