13-10-2015 08:04 PM
13-10-2015 08:04 PM
13-10-2015 08:06 PM
13-10-2015 08:06 PM
I think that a good portrayal of mental illness would be one where someone is having a mental health problem, they come and have treatment and they get better. Where it gets treated like any other condition.
13-10-2015 08:06 PM
13-10-2015 08:06 PM
I definitely do @Sienna and I think I have been surprised by the amount of journos I talk to who also have very personal experience with mental illness or suicide. For example one journalist at The Age I was advising (he had written a story about suicide) had experience even in his own family of this. It can be extremely stressfull and upsetting for a journalist to learn that they've over-stepped the guidelines when they have personal experience. That's why I think it pays for us to remember that "the media" are made up of individuals who are all different and have varying experience like you or I.
@CherryBomb the table I posted is a handy guide that we give to journos on language. There is still a lot to debate though.
@CannonSalt pleasure to be here! Do you mean how we interpret articles? Or how the journalists/media themselves interpret their own articles/self reflect
13-10-2015 08:06 PM - edited 13-10-2015 08:16 PM
13-10-2015 08:06 PM - edited 13-10-2015 08:16 PM
@chookmojo come to think of it, I reckon there has been a change in advertising that type of 'mad' talk is a lot less these days, though there's still a bit.
@kato I'm not sure if there's been a rise - perhaps @Former-Member might know some facts and stats in regards to adds and news coverage? In my own perspective, I feel like I see the repition of same stories on certain news outlets - another day, another crime by some with MI or a D&A issue. But there are also news outlets that are making some great changes.
13-10-2015 08:09 PM
13-10-2015 08:09 PM
@kato @CherryBomb there hasn't been enough research on this to quantify it. Although research by a Melbourne academic Perkis showed that on the whole Australian media had become more responsible in their reporting over the years the study took into account.
13-10-2015 08:10 PM
13-10-2015 08:10 PM
Here is the link if you're interested @kato or @CherryBomb http://www.mindframe-media.info/for-media/reporting-suicide/evidence-and-research/media-monitoring-s...
13-10-2015 08:11 PM
13-10-2015 08:11 PM
13-10-2015 08:12 PM
13-10-2015 08:12 PM
Annecdotally @chookmojo @CherryBomb through StigmaWatch, over the years we tend to get less and less reports of advertising that stigmatises mental illness fortunately.
13-10-2015 08:14 PM
13-10-2015 08:14 PM
Some great responses about how mental illness should be reported - from what everyone wrote, it seems like it is not an easy job!
I guess one thing that comes to mind is that community expectations are always changing. As @chookmojo mentioned, it is improving, and it is changing. We have seen it with other social issues. I wonder how we will view today's media coverage of MI in 20 years or so...
13-10-2015 08:15 PM
13-10-2015 08:15 PM
@CannonSalt good question! I would look for the source of their information- how did they come to that conclusion? Would it be different if there was another source they were aware of? Who is being quoted in the article and what interests/information/bias might they have in relation to mental illness?
I find that puts the information displayed into perspective. You know everyone you can also contact journalists directly and give them feedback in a constructive way that changes the way they report.
There is a regular StigmaWatcher I know who sends polite and constructive emails to journos at The Age and the ABC with evidence attached to support what he is saying and always gets good responses!
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