NBA star and alumnus Kevin Love to fund chair in psychology

Former Bruin seeks to end stigma around anxiety and depression
Kevin Love and Michelle Craske
Kevin Love, left, and psychologist Michelle Craske at a talk co-hosted by the UCLA College and the Geffen Playhouse that explored the causes of depression and anxiety, stigma and diagnosis and treatment.

The Cleveland Cavaliers' Kevin Love, a former Bruin basketball player who has publicly shared his struggles with panic attacks, anxiety and depression, has committed $500,000 through his foundation — matched by a $500,000 UCLA Centennial Term Chair Match — to establish the Kevin Love Fund Centennial Chair in UCLA's psychology department.

The $1 million investment will support the teaching and research activity of UCLA's faculty working to diagnose, prevent, treat and destigmatize anxiety and depression at one of the top-ranked psychology departments in the United States.

"Kevin Love has shown not only tremendous leadership, but also tremendous heart, both on and off the court," UCLA Chancellor Gene Block said. "Thanks to his gift, the UCLA psychology department will be able to further its efforts to help those who suffer from anxiety and depression and the stigma that surrounds these conditions."

The NBA star founded the Kevin Love Fund in 2018 to help people improve their physical and emotional well-being, with the goal of assisting more than 1 billion people over the next five years. On June 21, Love was honored at the ESPYs as the 2020 recipient of the Arthur Ashe Courage Award for his work as a mental health advocate.

"I'm concerned about the level of anxiety that people are feeling. Recent events, including the novel coronavirus outbreak, have put our society under enormous stress," Love said. "I am happy to be able to help UCLA, my alma mater, work toward solving some of society's biggest underlying issues. I hope one day we are able to erase the stigma around anxiety and depression, and we can only do that by improving diagnosis and treatment, fostering public conversations about mental health and encouraging people to seek help when they need it."

Love's contribution, bolstered by the Centennial Term Chair Match, will go to a scholar in the psychology department whose research could help advance more personalized treatments for people living with anxiety and depression.

UCLA's psychology department is among the nation's top-ranked departments of its kind and one of the largest academic units on campus, with more than 3,700 undergraduate students and 180 graduate students. In addition to its depth of expertise in anxiety and depression, the department's faculty is renowned for its studies in multiple areas including human relationships and social networks; the adolescent brain; substance abuse and addiction; health psychology; neuroscience of behavioral health; and cognition and consciousness.

"When heroes like Kevin come forward and share their vulnerability, it shines a light on anxiety and depression, and that helps chip away at stigma," said Michelle Craske, a UCLA distinguished professor psychology and of psychiatry and biobehavioral sciences. "I want to thank Kevin for his leadership and his courage to share his personal story with the world. He has inspired and provided hope to many. Through his continued efforts, he is changing people's lives."

Love first connected with Craske in August 2019 when they took part in a public conversation for "Minds Matter: Raising the Curtain on Depression and Anxiety." Co-hosted by UCLA College and the Geffen Playhouse, the event explored the causes of depression and anxiety, the public stigma associated with the conditions, and potential advances in diagnosis and treatment.

UCLA's psychology department has long been at the leading edge of research and clinical programs aimed at alleviating the suffering caused by anxiety and depression, which are among the leading causes of disability worldwide. The department's faculty also are integral to the UCLA Depression Grand Challenge, which aims to elucidate the basis of depression, integrating basic brain science, genetics and other disciplines.

"We are immensely grateful to Kevin and the Kevin Love Fund for this generous and impactful gift," said Victoria Sork, dean of life sciences in the UCLA College. "Kevin lives his values of service and investment in his communities. His gift will be of incalculable benefit to society for many decades to come."

The chair's establishment is pending approval by the UCLA Academic Senate and Block.

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