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Pennsylvania Sen. John Fetterman opens up about seeking treatment for depression: "I knew I needed help"

U.S. Sen. John Fetterman opens up about clinical depression on The Late Show With Stephen Colbert
U.S. Sen. John Fetterman opens up about clinical depression on The Late Show With Stephen Colbert 00:47

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pennsylvania Sen. John Fetterman says he had "dark conversations" about harming himself before he hit "the emergency brake" and sought treatment for depression.

The first-term Democrat from Braddock, in western Pennsylvania, said in an interview on NBC's "Meet the Press" that he remembers thinking about his three school-age children. "I can't be a blueprint for my children. I can't let them be left alone or not to understand why he would have done that," he said.

So Fetterman, 54, checked himself into Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Bethesda, Maryland, last Feb. 15. "There was nowhere else to go," he said, describing how he often felt during his stay that "there wasn't any hope sometimes and like, 'What do I have left?'"

He also wondered whether he would survive politically.

"When it got released where I was and where it was going, it was a big story. And so, I had assumed that that would be the end of my career," he said.

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When he sought treatment for clinical depression, Fetterman was still coping with the effects of the stroke he had in May 2022, during his campaign for one of the Senate's most contested seats. "My heart technically stopped, and it was a very touch-and-go situation," said Fetterman. A pacemaker was implanted with a defibrillator to manage two heart conditions, atrial fibrillation and cardiomyopathy.

His victory over Republican Mehmet Oz had helped Democrats keep control of the Senate and made him a national figure. It was the height of his political career, but Fetterman said he couldn't make it out of bed at his home in Braddock.

"I really scared my kids, and they thought, 'You won, Dad. Why aren't we enough? Why are you still so sad? Why are you even more sad?' And it was hard for — to explain why I was. And, of course, a 9-year-old child wouldn't understand that. And it was awful," Fetterman said.

So much so that he said he "pleaded not to go down to D.C." later that November for orientation sessions in Washington for newly elected lawmakers.

His favorite holiday was nearing, yet he was unable to think about getting Christmas presents for his children and "dreading" his swearing in on Capitol Hill early in the new year.

Within two months, he was at Walter Reed. Aides had described the new senator as being withdrawn and uninterested in eating, discussing work or the usual banter with staff.

"This is a conversation that I've had with myself and anybody that knows they're unable to address their depression, is they start to have dark conversations with themself about self-harm," Fetterman said. "And things continued to kind of tick off the list. And then I kind of hit the emergency brake."

He added, "I knew I needed help."

Before checking into Walter Reed, Fetterman had never publicly discussed his battle with depression. He has since said that he has experienced it on and off throughout his life.

He left Walter Reed at the end of March after six weeks of inpatient treatment with his depression "in remission," according to a statement from his office.

Doctors describe "remission" as when a patient responds to treatment so that they have returned to normal social function and they are indistinguishable from someone who has never had depression.

Fetterman has since become a visible presence in the Capitol, bantering with reporters, joking with Senate colleagues and speaking up at Senate hearings.

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To others who are now "facing a really dark holiday time," Fetterman offered this guidance: "I know that last year's was desolate. And this year's might be desolate. Next year's can be the best ever. And that's what happened for me."

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