Dr. Drew Defends "Celebrity Rehab" in Wake of McCready's Death - East Idaho News

Dr. Drew Defends “Celebrity Rehab” in Wake of McCready’s Death

  Published at

GETTY E 071211 DrDrewPinsky?  SQUARESPACE CACHEVERSION=1361307973574Michael Kovac/FilmMagic(NEW YORK) — Dr. Drew Pinsky defended his show Celebrity Rehab on ABC’s The View Tuesday, saying that he received messages of support from former participants after the death of Mindy McCready.  She was the fifth person who has appeared on the show to die in the past two years.

Dr. Drew was defending his show in the face of fresh criticism from the public and recovery advocates who say the process “doesn’t belong on our TV screens.” The grandfather of another one of the show’s deceased alums said that when he heard about McCready, he thought to himself, “Dr. Drew lost another one.”

“I wish I could be more responsible for them,” Dr. Drew said of the show’s alums when he called into The View on Tuesday. “I’ve received yesterday about 10 emails and texts from those that are doing well that are so grateful and wanted to reassure me.”

Former madam and show participant Heidi Fleiss emailed Dr. Drew to tell him the show was “the best thing I’ve ever done for myself,” he said.

Dr. Drew said he hadn’t been McCready’s doctor in years, but wished some of the show’s participants would have continued treatment with his team. The VH1 show had five seasons from 2008 to 2011. McCready appeared on the third season of the show.

McCready, 37, died Sunday of an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound at her Arkansas home, police said.

Dr. Drew said he reached out to McCready recently after her boyfriend and father of one of her two children, David Wilson, died in January of a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

“She was so severely shattered by that experience. All the people around her, her friends began calling me,” Dr. Drew told The View. “She was in trouble….She was really struggling and she knew it.”

He said McCready was “mortified” about the “stigma and judgment” from the public and the press and that it took convincing to get her to go a hospital. He said she eventually went, but left “prematurely” because of the fear of stigmatization and “that’s when things really unraveled.”

Losing custody of her children was “the last straw,” Dr. Drew said.

The country singer, who soared to the top of the charts with her debut album, Ten Thousand Angels, struggled with substance abuse, served time in jail and fought a lengthy battle with her mother over custody of her son.

Copyright 2013 ABC News Radio

SUBMIT A CORRECTION