A few months ago we released an 80,000 Hours Podcast episode I recorded with my colleague Howie on having a successful career with depression, anxiety and imposter syndrome.
It’s since become our most popular episode ever (both in terms of feedback and listening time).
We're considering doing a follow-up Q and A episode covering Howie's advice on getting treatment, managing mental health issues, thoughts on specific challenges, or anything else we didn't get to in the episode.
We’ll record it in a couple of weeks if we get enough questions that Howie has views on, so if you could post anything you'd like us to answer or discuss in the comments below by August 30, that’d be great.
(Or, if you'd like to submit a question anonymously, you can use this form.)
Thanks!
While I am sympathetic to the idea of doing lots of well-being stuff, it's not obvious why this needs a new EA-specified org.
To restate, I take it thought is that improving mental health of EAs could be a plausible priority because of the productivity gains from those people, which allows them to do more good - saliently, the main benefit of this isn't supposed to come from the welfare gains to the treated people.
Seeing as people can buy mental health treatments for themselves, and orgs can pay for it for their staff, I suppose the intervention you have in mind is to improve the mental health of organisation as a whole - that is, change the system, rather than keep the system fixed but help the people in the system. This is a classic organizational psychology piece, and I'm sure there are consultants EAs orgs could hire to help them with this. Despite being a huge happiness nerd, I'm actually not familiar with the world of happiness/mental health organisational consultancies. One I do know of is Friday Pulse, but I'm sure they aren't the only people who try to do this sort of thing.
Given such things exist, it's not obvious why self-described effective altruists should prioritise setting up more things of this type.