Joy Bittner: Tackling Depression Among Ecuadorian Poor & Refugees

Summary:

In this episode, we speak to Joy Bittner. Joy Bittner is the founder of Vida Plena, an organization invested in building strong mental health in Latin America. Vida Plena does this by training local communities to provide mental health care for depression. Joy majored in psychology for her undergraduate degree, then proceeded to do a master’s in social work in which she focused on social service administration. Later she did a second master’s in nonprofit management and has over 15 years of experience in non-profit management.

Some things we touch on in this episode:

  • What it is like working within the mental health field.

  • Why we should care about mental health as Christians.

  • The intersection between faith, effective altruism, and mental health. 

  • The lack of mental health care among the Latin American poor and how to provide it.

  • Joy’s career advice for Christians looking to work in mental health and to be impactful. 

Articles, organizations, and other media discussed in this episode

  • Vida Plena (which is Spanish for flourishing life) is an organization invested in building strong mental health in Latin America through training local communities to provide mental health care for depression.

  • Friendship Bench is a non-governmental organization in Zimbabwe that provides sustainable community-based psychological interventions that are evidence-based, accessible, and scalable.

  • Strong Minds is an organization that provides free group talk therapy to low-income women and adolescents with depression in Uganda and Zambia.

  • The UN Refugee Agency strives to ensure that everyone has the right to seek asylum and find safe refuge in another State, with the option to eventually return home, integrate or resettle.

  • CARE works to fight poverty and achieve social justice working with women and girls at the center.

  • Happier Lives Institute connects donors, researchers, and policymakers with the most cost-effective opportunities to increase global well-being.

  • The Patient Health Questionnaire is a standardized instrument that screens, diagnoses, objectifies, monitors, and assesses the degree of depression.

  • The Global Mental Health Lab aims to reduce the burden of mental illness and improve well-being in under-resourced communities around the world.

  • Task-shifted therapy is an evidence-based model of therapy that is a locally adapted version of evidence-based mental health trauma-focused Cognitive Behavioral Therapy.


Episode Highlights:

It’s like really being able to help people to be able to experience life to the fullest because I think and again, as a Christian space, that is what God desires for us.

[00:08:30] “But when you're suffering from depression or other mental illness, that means you're not able to enjoy that. You're not able to be there for other people in your community. And so it's wanting to really help people to have that full live that full life…But and then putting them at some sort of neutral baseline. It's much bigger than that. It's like really being able to help people to be able to experience life in the fullest because I think and again, as a Christian space, that is what God desires for us.”

I think there's a little bit of self-evaluation of what's going to be most impactful for me.

[00:18:55]“And so it's in some ways, I think sometimes people find it somewhat deceptive, they want to help people, but then there's like the sense of helping people is an abstract way, so I'm not interacting with people as directly. And so I think there's a little bit of self-evaluation of what's going to be most impactful for me. Because at the end of the day, if you choose something like decide abstractly, this is going to be the most impactful thing, but then you are not happy in the day-to-day work, it's not going to be that impactful.

People are learning the skill, not just fixing the symptoms of what they're going through, but actually learning the life skills to be able to address that in the future

[00:34:17]“It makes the program cheaper, easier to kind of run, whereas if you were prescribing medications then you'd have to have that aspect. And I think also the benefit of talk therapy and specifically, the way we're setting it up about people learning the skill, not just fixing the symptoms of what they're going through, but actually learning the life skills to be able to address that in the future.

Just giving people permission to be really honest about the struggles that they're going through and then to feel that support from other people.

[00:37:42]“I think what it really is is there's something really special about people coming together and being vulnerable. I think we've all experienced that. And imagine in a lot of the conversations with each, it encourages that as well. Like being able to come together and have a space where like this is you're supposed to be vulnerable here. And then once you do, it's amazing. And so that is what the group magic of the group is. Just giving people permission to be really honest about the struggles that they're going through and then to feel that support from other people…just being that supportive person makes such a huge difference, much more than you think it might, just having that person knowing that they have someone who's interested in their lives and caring about them will make a huge, tremendous difference.”

If you can help one person, you're not just impacting their immediate life, you're actually impacting a brighter range of people.

[00:56:12]“If anybody has someone in their immediate family where it may be a parent or a sibling who's been suffering from a mental illness, you know how much that impacts your family. And so there's also that sort of like overall sort of like impact. If you can help one person, you're not just impacting their immediate life, you're actually impacting a brighter range of people. So that's also kind of interesting. They're also small kinds of statistics in terms of like, investment. I remember seeing one place was like just like the return on investment.”

Developing your foreign language abilities would be a very specific strong piece of career advice I'd give somebody and just like looping that around.

[01:17:24]“For anybody interested in international development it is critical to have a foreign language and think about where you want to work and if you want to be in Africa then it's going to be like French or Swahili or somewhere with a specific local language or so Latin America is Spanish. But being able to communicate locally with people is absolutely critical and so that would be another thing to kind of focus on as you're interested in that is developing your foreign language abilities would be a very specific strong piece of career advice I'd give somebody and just like looping that around.



 

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