Lady Gaga opens up on personal mental health crisis
Lady Gaga was honored Thursday night at the SAG-AFTRA Foundation’s 3rd annual Patron of the Artists Awards and gave a speech about mental health awareness, calling for real change in the treatment of and the stigma surrounding the disease.
“Today, one in four people experience a mental health crisis. I am one of those people,” she said. “…Each year, we lose more than 800,000 mothers, fathers, sons, daughters, teachers, sisters, brothers, aunts, uncles, coaches, veterans, doctors, nurses, and artists to suicide.”
Gaga urged the SAG-AFTRA Foundation to expand their programs for mental health care, later offering to put her money where her mouth is and shell out a donation to partner with them. She then shared personal details of her own mental health crisis.
“I did not have a mental health team or program when I began my career in Hollywood,” she said. “Having a mental health team has completely changed my life and conditions that I have that are not curable I have learned now are treatable and I can stop living in fear and begin living with bravery.” Through treatment, Gaga found that she suffered from symptoms of disassociation and PTSD.


