March 1, 2021

Hazelden Betty Ford Promotes Physician to be Next CEO

Staff & Wire Reports

Joseph Lee, MD, has been promoted to become the eighth president and CEO of the Hazelden Betty Ford Foundation, effective June 28. An experienced addiction medicine doctor and child and adolescent psychiatrist whose parents immigrated to the U.S. from Seoul, South Korea, Lee will be the first physician and first non-white leader to take the helm of the nation’s largest nonprofit provider of addiction and mental health care, recovery resources, and related education, prevention, research and advocacy. At 45, he also will be the youngest CEO in the organization’s 72-year history.

“Dr. Lee is a generational talent who will be a pioneering leader for Hazelden Betty Ford and the field of addiction treatment for years to come,” said Lester Munson, of Chicago, who chairs the Hazelden Betty Ford Foundation’s Board of Trustees. “At this important juncture in the history of our nation, industry and organization—our Board decided that a physician CEO would be best for our future. We’re excited about Dr. Lee’s record of innovation, clinical excellence, patient-centered care and ethical, values-based leadership, as well as his exceptional abilities to think and communicate strategically, lift up other voices, and inspire hope, passion and commitment.”

Lee, medical director for Hazelden Betty Ford’s Youth Continuum since 2010, will succeed Mark G. Mishek as president and CEO and also as president of the nationally accredited Hazelden Betty Ford Graduate School of Addiction Studies.

“I am profoundly humbled and grateful to our Board of Trustees for the honor of carrying forward Hazelden Betty Ford’s incredible legacy as a force of healing and hope for individuals, families and communities affected by addiction,” Lee said. “Thanks to Mark Mishek’s leadership these past 13 years, Hazelden Betty Ford has evolved into a growing force within, rather than on the periphery of, healthcare—helping exponentially more people as a result. I am energized and inspired to build upon Hazelden Betty Ford’s strong and healthy foundation and broaden our banner even further as we seek to serve more people in different ways wherever they are.”

Lee completed his residency at Duke University Hospital and his fellowship at Johns Hopkins Hospital after earning his bachelor’s and medical degrees at the University of Oklahoma. He is board certified in adult psychiatry, child and adolescent psychiatry, and addiction medicine, and is a member of the Motivational Interviewing Network of Trainers. In addition, Lee is an active member of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and the American Society of Addiction Medicine, and serves on the board of the St. Paul and Minnesota Foundation, a philanthropic organization with $1.6 billion in charitable assets.

“Humility, empathy, grace and love—those are the values that define Dr. Lee the most. They’re also values that were important to my mother during her 33 years of recovery,” said Hazelden Betty Ford Trustee Susan Ford Bales, daughter of former First Lady Betty Ford. “In addition to being a brilliant therapist and physician steeped in the science of medicine and quality care, Dr. Lee is a deeply thoughtful and insightful person who understands the human condition, the needs of the human spirit, and the power of community and connection. He is beloved by the many families he has helped over the years, and if my mother were still with us, she would love him, too. I am grateful to have such a well-rounded and talented leader carry forward and build upon her legacy.”

“Betty Ford was ahead of her time in many ways, and her influence endures—not just at the Hazelden Betty Ford Foundation but throughout the world,” Lee said. “By talking publicly about her recovery from addiction and confronting stigma head-on, she laid the groundwork for others to do the same, shaping the platform for our work and for the voices of all those affected by the disease. Living up to her legacy is a tremendous honor, responsibility and priority.”

Lee will take over amid growing demand for Hazelden Betty Ford’s addiction treatment and mental health care as well as its prevention, research, education and collaborative services.

“On its tails, the COVID-19 pandemic has brought forth another pandemic—a pandemic of despair, suffering, loneliness, depression and overdoses,” Lee said. “We’re seeing escalating needs firsthand at Hazelden Betty Ford and expect them to persist for months and possibly years to come.

“COVID-19 has exposed the reality that we need more prevention in schools; easier access to quality treatment; and more robust ecosystems of community and recovery support to help people stay well long-term,” Lee continued. “Investing in prevention, treatment and recovery is wise on many levels, but institutionalized stigma and discrimination still get in the way—too often leaving people with substance use and mental health disorders feeling like second-class citizens with second-class illnesses. We cannot allow that status quo to continue. As a healthcare and educational entity ourselves, Hazelden Betty Ford is uniquely positioned to confront stigma at an institutional level, and that is another one of our priorities.”

“From early pioneers Patrick Butler and Dan Anderson to First Lady Betty Ford, Mark Mishek and now Dr. Lee, Hazelden Betty Ford has been fortunate to find exceptional leaders who were able to step in at just the right times,” Board Chair Munson said. “On the heels of Mark’s extraordinary contributions, Dr. Lee is the ideal leader to guide us into a new frontier of innovation and healthcare excellence and to lift up new voices and broaden the banner of the organization’s reach, influence and impact.”

The Hazelden Betty Ford Foundation is a force of healing and hope for individuals, families and communities affected by addiction to alcohol and other drugs. As the nation’s leading nonprofit provider of comprehensive inpatient and outpatient treatment for adults and youth, the Foundation has 17 locations nationwide and collaborates with an expansive network throughout health care. With a legacy that began in 1949 and includes the 1982 founding of the Betty Ford Center, the Foundation today also encompasses a graduate school of addiction studies, a publishing division, an addiction research center, recovery advocacy and thought leadership, professional and medical education programs, school-based prevention resources and a specialized program for children who grow up in families with addiction.

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