Academic literature on the topic 'Media depictions of mental illness'

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Journal articles on the topic "Media depictions of mental illness"

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Bender, Eve. "Media, Community Leaders Honored for Mental Illness Depictions." Psychiatric News 45, no. 1 (January 2010): 4–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1176/pn.45.1.psychnews_45_1_008.

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Coverdale, John, Raymond Nairn, and Donna Claasen. "Depictions of Mental Illness in Print Media: A Prospective National Sample." Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry 36, no. 5 (October 2002): 697–700. http://dx.doi.org/10.1046/j.1440-1614.2002.00998.x.

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Objective: Because there are no published reports of depictions of mental illness in print media based on national samples, we set out to prospectively collect and analyse a near complete New Zealand sample of print media. Methods: A commercial clipping bureau was contracted to provide cuttings of all items with any mental health or illness aspect over a four week period. These items were analysed for potentially positive and negative depictions and how mental illness was represented within each item. An independent search for additional newspaper items concerning one prominently featured topic indicated that the rate of identification of relevant stories was at least 91%. Result: The collection consisted of six hundred print items which were most commonly news or editorial pieces (n = 562, 93.7%). Negative depictions predominated, with dangerousness to others (n = 368, 61.3%) and criminality (n = 284, 47.3%) being the most common. Positive depictions, including human rights themes, leadership and educational accomplishments occurred in 27% (n = 164) of all items. Generic mental illness terminology without reference to specific diagnostic categories was present in 47% of all items (n = 284). Conclusions: Negative depictions that predominate confirm the stereotypic understanding of mental illness that is stigmatizing. These findings underscore the challenge facing us as mental health professionals attempting to change attitudes towards mental disorders when the stereotypes are so regularly reinforced.
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Allen, Ruth, and Raymond G. Nairn. "Media Depictions of Mental Illness: An Analysis of the Use of Dangerousness." Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry 31, no. 3 (June 1997): 375–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.3109/00048679709073847.

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Objective: To explore how the commonsense understanding, that those with a mental illness are dangerous, is deployed in a small sample of print media. Method: The print media sample was subjected to a discourse analysis informed by knowledge of media practices. Materials were read closely and references to mental illness were identified, classified and analysed. Results: This non-sensational material was shown to provide repeated confirmations of the commonsense understanding that mental illnesses make people unpredictable and dangerous. Close study of the lead article suggested that it was written so that readers had to draw on such understandings to make sense of the account it presented. Conclusion: The study challenges the notion that media present negative depictions of mental illnesses either because journalists are poorly informed or because ‘sensation sells’. It is concluded that media practices directed at engaging readers require the use of cases and a style of writing that forces readers to draw upon commonsense knowledge of mental illness to understand the text. It is argued that this is a deliberate effort to enlist readers as co-creators of the text and thereby increase their interest.
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Chan, Ginny, and Philip T. Yanos. "Media depictions and the priming of mental illness stigma." Stigma and Health 3, no. 3 (August 2018): 253–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/sah0000095.

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Nairn, R., S. Coverdale, and J. H. Coverdale. "A Framework for Understanding Media Depictions of Mental Illness." Academic Psychiatry 35, no. 3 (May 1, 2011): 202–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.1176/appi.ap.35.3.202.

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Nairn, R. G., and J. H. Coverdale. "People Never See Us Living Well: An Appraisal of the Personal Stories About Mental Illness in a Prospective Print Media Sample." Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry 39, no. 4 (April 2005): 281–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/j.1440-1614.2005.01566.x.

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Objective: Having found no discussions of self-depictions offered by psychiatric patients in the mass media we sought such items in a prospective national sample of print media and analysed how those speakers portrayed themselves. Method: As part of a larger study of media depictions of mental illnesses in print media all items with any mental health or illness aspect that appeared in a New Zealand publication over a four-week period were collected. The resulting collection of 600 items ranged from news briefs to full-page newspaper articles. From that set we selected and analysed items in which a person identified as having been a psychiatric patient or as having a mental disorder was either quoted by the reporter who had interviewed them, or personally described their experiences. Employing both propositional analyses and discourse analysis we explored how the speakers were positioned and identified patterns or themes in their construction of living with a mental illness. Results: Only five articles (0.8%) met our criteria for a person with a mental disorder being reported directly. In those items the journalists had positioned the speakers as credible, expert sources who, in representing their lives and experiences, drew on five clusters of resources, that we titled: Ordinariness/Living Well; Vulnerability; Stigma; Crisis; and Disorder/ Treatment. Ordinariness/Living Well foregrounded the role of personal strengths in living well and in overcoming adversity, particularly that associated with being stigmatized. We identified that theme as central to the ways in which these speakers depicted themselves as recognizably human and understandable. Conclusion: The findings are preliminary but these depictions are different from those reported by most researchers. Unlike those depictions, these speakers provided accessible and recognizably human self-portrayals. That finding intensifies our concern that most researchers appear to be unaware that these consumer voices are largely absent from mass media depictions of mental illnesses.
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March, Priscilla A. "Ethical Responses to Media Depictions of Mental Illness: An Advocacy Approach." Journal of Humanistic Counseling, Education and Development 38, no. 2 (December 1999): 70–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/j.2164-490x.1999.tb00065.x.

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Coverdale, J. H. "A Research Agenda Concerning Depictions of Mental Illness in Children's Media." Academic Psychiatry 30, no. 1 (February 1, 2006): 83–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1176/appi.ap.30.1.83.

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Nairn, Raymond. "Does the Use of Psychiatrists as Sources of Information Improve Media Depictions of Mental Illness? A Pilot Study." Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry 33, no. 4 (August 1999): 583–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/j.1440-1614.1999.00587.x.

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Objective: The aim of this study is to determine whether mental illnesses are depicted in less negative ways in print media when psychiatrists rather than lay persons are the source of information. Method: Seven items from a special report on mental health, four derived from lay sources and three from psychiatrists, were subjected to a discourse analysis informed by knowledge of media practices. Results: The psychiatrists were clearly distinguished and deployed as experts in contrast to lay sources. Two of the psychiatrists presented mental illnesses in less negative ways than in the other items. These more positive depictions were undermined by the devices that the journalists used to give authority to the portrayals of mental illness and by the need to create ‘newsworthy’ items. Conclusion: If psychiatrists and other mental health professionals are to have a positive effect on how media depict mental illness, they will have to develop closer relationships with journalists and a better appreciation of media priorities and practices.
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Chen, Marian, and Stephen Lawrie. "Newspaper depictions of mental and physical health." BJPsych Bulletin 41, no. 6 (December 2017): 308–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/pb.bp.116.054775.

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Aims and methodMedia portrayals of mental illness have long been recognised as being misleading and stigmatising. Following the campaigns of several advocacy groups to address this issue, we aimed to evaluate the impact on mental health reporting over time. We repeated a survey we did 15 years ago using the same methods. Nine UK daily newspapers were surveyed over a 4-week period and coded with a schema to analyse the reporting of mental health compared with physical health.ResultsIn total, 963 articles – 200 on mental health and 763 on physical health – were identified. Over half of the articles on mental health were negative in tone: 18.5% indicated an association with violence compared with 0.3% of articles on physical health. However, there were more quotes from patients with mental disorders than physical disorders (22.5% v. 19.7%) and an equal mention of treatment and rehabilitation.Clinical implicationsMental health in print media remains tainted by themes of violence, however some improvement in reporting in recent years is evident, in particular by providing a voice for people with mental illness.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Media depictions of mental illness"

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Kling, Sara, and Mattias Liljeqvist. "Hur framställs psykisk ohälsa i meider? : Specialistsjuksköterskors perspektiv i psykiatrisk vård." Thesis, Högskolan i Halmstad, Akademin för hälsa och välfärd, 2018. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:hh:diva-36967.

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Utifrån ett holistiskt perspektiv framträder ett tydligt problem i hur ensidigt media framställer psykisk ohälsa. Genom att studera specialistsjuksköterskors erfarenheter av medias rapportering om psykisk ohälsa kan ett hittills ofta förbisett perspektiv bidra till ökad kunskap om mediers rapportering om psykisk ohälsa. Syftet med denna studie var att beskriva erfarenheter bland specialistsjuksköterskor i psykiatrisk vård av hur psykisk ohälsa framställs i medier. Föreliggande studie hade en kvalitativ design med induktiv ansats och genomfördes med semi-strukturerade intervjuer med 8 specialistsjuksköterskor i psykiatrisk vård. Resultatet visar att psykisk ohälsa är stigmatiserat och att media i många fall framställer en alltför negativ och missvisande bild av psykisk ohälsa, trots att det finns positiva perspektiv på psykisk ohälsa, främst i alternativ till traditionella medier. Det medicinska perspektivet dominerar i media och det finns en avsaknad av det psykiatriska omvårdnadsperspektivet. Konklusionen i föreliggande studie är att specialistsjuksköterskor inom psykiatrisk vård erfar medias framställning av psykisk ohälsa som negativ och missvisande. De erfar även att det medicinska perspektivet får ta mycket stor plats och att psykiatrisk omvårdnad osynliggörs. Mer forskning bör bedrivas på hur psykisk ohälsa framställs på sociala medier och hur avsaknaden av andra perspektiv än det medicinska påverkar allmänhetens förståelse för psykisk ohälsa. Journalisters perspektiv bör studeras. Specialistsjuksköterskor inom psykiatrisk vård borde beredas en större plats i media. Sjuksköterskor och sjuksköterskestudenter borde stödjas i att ge omvårdnadsperspektivet större plats såväl kliniskt som i media.
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Nairn, Raymond George Ross. "Madness, media & mental illness: a social constructionist approach." Thesis, University of Auckland, 2003. http://hdl.handle.net/2292/2280.

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Background Depictions of mental illnesses in the mass media have been analysed and criticised for more than forty years with little improvement, and that has serious implications for the ongoing efforts to destigmatise both mental illnesses and those who suffer from them. Aims To examine media depictions of mental illnesses within a social constructionist framework. To identify why media depictions take the form they do and to indicate ways in which such practices may be more effectively addressed. Method Items chosen from factual media genres were subjected to discourse analysis. This form of analysis attends to the preferred meaning of the items and how that meaning is constructed within the item. Exemplars of such analysis are contrasted with the content analyses more commonly performed on media materials before reporting analyses of items from everyday media reports and of materials that were expected to be less stigmatising. Results Irrespective of the form of analysis it is found that media depictions of mental illnesses are dominated by representations of dangerousness, criminal violence, unpredictability, and social incompetence. The same features were found in a destigmatisation documentary and a series of backgrounders on mental health services, in both of which madness was utilised to create interest and drama. It is argued that these characteristics occur because media personnel, like most laypersons, represent mental illnesses as forms of madness. Conclusions That my social constructionist analysis is able to account for the lack of change in media depictions over forty years. That the preference for a public mental health approach to destigmatisation is misplaced because it is unable to address the fear generated by lay understandings of mental illnesses. That the attempt to avoid conflation of the person with the disorder in Diagnostic and Statistical Manuals beginning in 1980 was an inadequate step in an appropriate direction in that it sought to remind clinicians that a mental disorder does not make a person non-human. The thesis findings are interpreted as showing that destigmatisation requires a new way of depicting mental illnesses, one that privileges the individual's experience and their ordinary humanness.
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Chartrand, David V. "The media and mental health: media familiarity with nationwide standards for reducing mental illness and suicide." Thesis, Kansas State University, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/2097/16189.

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Master of Science
Department of Journalism and Mass Communications
William Adams
Mental illness and suicide present vexing challenges for journalists who seek to elevate public understanding of public health issues and remedies. Using the theoretical frameworks of media agenda setting and issue framing, content analysis was used to examine a nationwide sample of newspapers stories for evidence of media familiarity with prevailing norms for community mental health care and suicide prevention. Stories examined showed little evidence of such expertise, leaving questions about the ability of journalists — and their readers — to differentiate between standard and substandard mental health care systems. Long-term change in public policy about mental illness and suicide prevention will likely depend on the ability of special interests to capture and keep media attention as well as media management decisions to assign mental health coverage to general assignment reporters or place it in the hands of journalists with specialized training.
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Plummer, Anna. "“What About Bob?” An Analysis of Gendered Mental Illness in a Mainstream Film Comedy." NEOMED College of Graduate Studies / OhioLINK, 2020. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ne2gs1597767396737971.

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Cousineau, Anna Desiree. "“Madness” in the Media: How Can Print Journalists Better Report on Mental Illnesses?" Thesis, University of North Texas, 2014. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc700042/.

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Stereo types and stigmas of individuals with mental illnesses have proved to be a major roadblock preventing these individuals from seeking help. The news media, despite having a responsibility to accurately inform the public, has played a significant role in portraying individuals with mental illness as violent, unpredictable, dangerous, and unfit to live with the rest of “normal” society. This happens through the words journalists choose to use and the information they choose in included, and excluded, when reporting on mental health issues. This study attempts to establish a guideline that journalists can follow that will hopefully reduce the stigma of mental illness in the media, and eventually in society. This study used a 2 x 2 ANCOVA to test two independent variables (amount of labeling terms and amount of corrective information). The variables were manipulated by modifying a news article four times to produce articles with varying levels of labeling terms and corrective information. A control article was also be used. The articles were randomized and passed out to 220 undergraduate college students at the University of North Texas who completed a questionnaire, read their assigned article, and then completed a second questionnaire to determine the impact the article had on their attitudes about individuals with mental illnesses.
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Rawling, Katherine Dorothy Berry. "Visualising mental illness : gender, medicine and visual media, c.1850-1910." Thesis, Royal Holloway, University of London, 2011. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.542372.

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The history of madness is populated by mad women and yet, the visual record of madness is bursting with images of madmen alongside the familiar 'Ophelias' and hysterics. This thesis uses patient photographs to examine how patient identities were constructed and represented in the second half of the nineteenth century. It considers the effects of gender, class and medical discourses on how patients were constituted by images. It seeks to explain the effects of patient photography and the ways in which the medical encounter between doctor-photographer and psychiatric patient was visualised. By so doing it sheds light on photographic practices within Victorian institutions, the relationship between photography and medicine, and the various ways in which photography represented gendered mentally ill patients. The thesis draws together histories of madness and photography by exammmg photographs of patients diagnosed with mental conditions, produced from c.1850 to 1910. It is organised according to 'institution' and considers the photographs contained in British textbooks, British and French medical journals and the medical case books from two British asylums. The photographs they contain are analysed in the context of earlier attempts to visualise the insane in the late-eighteenth and early-nineteenth century, and in the light of nonmedical photography practised in commercial studio or family environments. Psychiatric photographs were produced in vast numbers but their style, mode of production and display and, crucially, the patient identities they represent, are far from standardised or indeed predictable. This variety reflects the different priorities of the photographers, the type of patient being photographed and the contemporaneous photographic practices of individual institutions. The visual connections and differences between several types of photograph are discussed, as is their impact on the identity of the subject. It is argued that only by considering images from a variety of sources can the role and effect of photography in this context begin to be understood more fully.
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Coppock, Mary Jane. "Polarizing Narratives: Harmful Representations of Mental Illness and Bipolar in Popular Media." Scholarship @ Claremont, 2017. http://scholarship.claremont.edu/scripps_theses/953.

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Representations of mental illness in mainstream media have historically been infantilizing and dangerous. In the last century, dominant media has perpetuated inaccurate and damaging tropes about bipolar disorder in particular, perpetuating misunderstanding and stigma. Despite this fact, art can provide an outlet through which healthy images that promote understanding and sympathy can be dispersed. My project, Polarized, presents a more accurate representation of the disorder and its effects on individuals who struggle with it, as well as their loved ones. Bipolar disorders are a group of mental illnesses that cause dramatic shifts in an individual’s mood, energy, thinking ability, and sexual drive. In popular media, bipolar is represented in a number of different problematic ways ranging from childishness to irrational violence, which provide damaging stereotypes of the bipolar community and ultimately serve to further ostracize the bipolar community. Polarized’s critique of representations of disability in hegemonic discourse is informed by true stories and histories of mental illness. The short’s narrative is fictional, inspired by my own experience as a young woman with Bipolar II and augmented with the research and memoirs of manic-depressive diagnosed clinician Kay Jamison as written in An Unquiet Mind: A Memoir of Moods and Madness.
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Vermeulen, Monique. "An investigation into the representation of the mentally ill in popular film." Thesis, Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/10948/800.

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There is a common perception that media depiction of mental health and illness is overwhelmingly negative and inaccurate. Media portrayal of mental illness is also viewed as an important element in forming and influencing society’s attitudes towards mental health issues, although there is no causal link to prove this. People with mental illness are most commonly shown as being violent and aggressive. Movie stereotypes that contribute to the stigmatisation of mentally ill persons include the mental patient as rebellious free spirit, homicidal maniac, seductress, enlightened member of society, narcissistic parasite, and zoo specimen. The profession of psychiatry is, has always been, and will likely continue to be a much enjoyed subject among filmmakers and their audiences, as it tends to provide exciting and emotionally compelling opportunities to portray personal struggles feared by most of humanity. This research will analyse the entertainment media in an attempt to provide evidence to support the above statement. The research will, furthermore, analyse the manner in which entertainment media represent the mentally ill with reference to popular films invariably produced in the US
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Cross, Simon. "Mediating madness : mental illness and public discourse in current affairs television." Thesis, Loughborough University, 1999. https://dspace.lboro.ac.uk/2134/7252.

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This thesis examines the public character of television and the various ways it works as communication. Drawing on a case study of recent British current affairs programmes dealing with mental health issues it explores the interplay between television form and content. The first part acknowledges television as the pivotal medium of the contemporary public sphere and situates its various organisations of language and imagery at the heart of programme makers' attempts to produce meaningful and entertaining programmes. Against the grain of those who see television as an arational technology, a case is made for its relevance as a vocal space for all citizens. However, in the historical context of British broadcasting, the differential distribution of communicative entitlements entreats us to view access to discursive space as a principle which soon runs up against its limits. The second half of this thesis explores the shortcomings of this system in relation to `expert' and lay people's access to a public voice on mental health issues. The recent transition from the asylum to Community Care invites an intermingling of voices in which the authority of this or that brand of professional knowledge cannot be taken for granted. The re-entry of ex-mental patients into the community also provides programme makers with opportunities to promote new forms of social solidarity based on `thick descriptions' of the person rather than the patient. The case-study presented here suggests however, that participation in televised forms of debate and argumentation does not match the promises of post-modem rhetoric. Despite the airing of new voices and the presentation of new controversies, British television's treatment of mental illness continues to revolve around established hierarchies of knowledge and a depiction of the (ex-)mental patient as less than a fully cognizant citizen. Visual techniques play a crucial role in this process. By recycling familiar images of madness as dangerous and unpredictable, people with a history of schizophrenic illness remain enmeshed in a web of psychiatric 'otherness' which undermines their credibility as speakers.
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Little, Julianna. "“Frailty, thy name is woman”: Depictions of Female Madness." VCU Scholars Compass, 2015. http://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd/3709.

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Concepts of mental health and normality cannot be understood apart from cultural norms and values. The most significant of cultural constructions that shape our view of madness is gender. Madness has been perceived for centuries metaphorically and symbolically as a feminine illness and continues to be gendered into the twenty-first century. Works of art and literature and psychiatric medicine influence each other as well as our understanding and perception of mental illness. Throughout history, images of mental illness in women send the message that women are weak, dangerous, and require containment. What are the cultural links between femininity and insanity, and how are they represented? Through the lenses of disciplines such as theatre criticism, feminist theory, and psychiatry, this thesis examines the history of madness as a gendered concept and its depictions in art and literature. Additionally, it will explore the representation of female madness in contemporary dramatic literature as compared to the medical model used during the era in which it was written as well as the social and cultural conditions and expectations of the period. The three plays under consideration are: Long Day’s Journey Into Night, written in 1941 by Eugene O’Neill; Fefu and Her Friends, written in 1977 by Maria Irene Fornés; and Next to Normal, produced on Broadway in its current form in 2009 and written and scored by Brian Yorkey and Tom Kitts. None of these plays tell a tidy story with a straightforward ending. In none do treatment facilities offer refuge or health professionals offer answers. Struggling characters resort to drug abuse, fall prey to internalization, or leave treatment all together, having been subjected to enough victimization. The relationship between patient and physician is depicted to be, at best, ambivalent. The themes in these plays illuminate women’s mental illness as an extensive problem with many contributing factors, and the origins of which are quite complex.
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Books on the topic "Media depictions of mental illness"

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Clifford, Katrina. Policing, Mental Illness and Media. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-61490-4.

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Philo, Greg. Mass media representations of mental health/illness. Glasgow: Glasgow University Media Group, 1993.

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Philo, Greg. Mass media representations of mental health/illness: A study of media content. Glasgow: Glasgow University Media Group, 1993.

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Media madness: Public images of mental illness. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1995.

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Philo, Greg. Media representations of mental health/illness: Content study. Glasgow: Glasgow University Media Group, 1993.

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Philo, Greg. Media representations of mental health/illness: Audience reception study. Glasgow: Glasgow University Media Group, 1993.

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Philo, Greg. Mass media representations of mental health/illness: Audience reception study. Glasgow: Glasgow University Media Group, 1993.

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Mediating mental health: Contexts, debates and analysis. Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2011.

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Mediating madness: Mental distress and cultural representation. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010.

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Mental illness in popular media: Essays on the representation of disorders. Jefferson, N.C: McFarland & Co., 2012.

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Book chapters on the topic "Media depictions of mental illness"

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Doyle, Dennis. "Imagination and the Prevention of Violence: Fredric Wertham, Mass Media and Mental Hygiene, 1946–1958." In Preventing Mental Illness, 39–60. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-98699-9_2.

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Clifford, Katrina. "The Search for Solutions to the Problems of Policing Mental Ill-Health." In Policing, Mental Illness and Media, 87–146. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-61490-4_3.

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Clifford, Katrina. "Introduction." In Policing, Mental Illness and Media, 1–40. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-61490-4_1.

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Clifford, Katrina. "Conclusion." In Policing, Mental Illness and Media, 271–87. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-61490-4_7.

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Clifford, Katrina. "The Thin Blue Line of Mental Health." In Policing, Mental Illness and Media, 41–85. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-61490-4_2.

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Clifford, Katrina. "Case Study: The Paul Klein Incident." In Policing, Mental Illness and Media, 191–229. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-61490-4_5.

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Clifford, Katrina. "Framing Effects and Changing Media Practices." In Policing, Mental Illness and Media, 231–70. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-61490-4_6.

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Clifford, Katrina. "Making Sense of Fatal Mental Health Crisis Interventions." In Policing, Mental Illness and Media, 147–90. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-61490-4_4.

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Leigh, Hoyle. "External Storage of Memes: Culture, Media, Cyberspace." In Genes, Memes, Culture, and Mental Illness, 109–17. New York, NY: Springer New York, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4419-5671-2_10.

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Swantek, Sandra S. "Media, Minorities, and the Stigma of Mental Illness." In Determinants of Minority Mental Health and Wellness, 1–15. New York, NY: Springer New York, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-0-387-75659-2_5.

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Conference papers on the topic "Media depictions of mental illness"

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Feuston, Jessica L. "Algorithms, Oppression, and Mental Illness on Social Media." In CHI '19: CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3290607.3299072.

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Tadisetty, Srikanth, and Kambiz Ghazinour. "Anonymous Prediction of Mental Illness in Social Media." In 2021 IEEE 11th Annual Computing and Communication Workshop and Conference (CCWC). IEEE, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ccwc51732.2021.9376140.

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Saravia, Elvis, Chun-Hao Chang, Renaud Jollet De Lorenzo, and Yi-Shin Chen. "MIDAS: Mental illness detection and analysis via social media." In 2016 IEEE/ACM International Conference on Advances in Social Networks Analysis and Mining (ASONAM). IEEE, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/asonam.2016.7752434.

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Briciu, Anamaria, and Mihaiela Lupea. "Studying the language of mental illness in Romanian social media." In 2018 IEEE 14th International Conference on Intelligent Computer Communication and Processing (ICCP). IEEE, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/iccp.2018.8516436.

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De Choudhury, Munmun. "Social Media for Mental Illness Risk Assessment, Prevention and Support." In HT '15: 26th ACM Conference on Hypertext and Social Media. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2806655.2806659.

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Hemmatirad, Kimia, Hojjat Bagherzadeh, Ehsan Fazl-Ersi, and Abedin Vahedian. "Detection of Mental Illness Risk on Social Media through Multi-level SVMs." In 2020 8th Iranian Joint Congress on Fuzzy and intelligent Systems (CFIS). IEEE, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/cfis49607.2020.9238692.

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De Choudhury, Munmun, Sanket S. Sharma, Tomaz Logar, Wouter Eekhout, and René Clausen Nielsen. "Gender and Cross-Cultural Differences in Social Media Disclosures of Mental Illness." In CSCW '17: Computer Supported Cooperative Work and Social Computing. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2998181.2998220.

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Chai, Yibo, Fengyang Wu, Rui Sun, Zhongliang Zhang, Jie Bao, Runxin Ma, Qizhou Peng, Danqin Wu, Yexing Wan, and Keyu Li. "Predicting Future Alleviation of Mental Illness in Social Media: An Empathy-Based Social Network Perspective." In 2019 IEEE Intl Conf on Parallel & Distributed Processing with Applications, Big Data & Cloud Computing, Sustainable Computing & Communications, Social Computing & Networking (ISPA/BDCloud/SocialCom/SustainCom). IEEE, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ispa-bdcloud-sustaincom-socialcom48970.2019.00230.

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Kirinde Gamaarachchige, Prasadith, and Diana Inkpen. "Multi-Task, Multi-Channel, Multi-Input Learning for Mental Illness Detection using Social Media Text." In Proceedings of the Tenth International Workshop on Health Text Mining and Information Analysis (LOUHI 2019). Stroudsburg, PA, USA: Association for Computational Linguistics, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.18653/v1/d19-6208.

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Martin, Jennifer, Elspeth McKay, and Janki Shankar. "Bias Misinformation and Disinformation: Mental Health Employment and Human Computer Interaction." In InSITE 2006: Informing Science + IT Education Conference. Informing Science Institute, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.28945/3016.

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Abstract:
This paper explores the design and application of information communication technologies and human computer interaction for people recovering from severe mental illness wishing to gain employment. It is argued bias, misinformation and disinformation limit opportunities for people recovering from mental illness who are seeking employment. Issues of bias are explored in relation to systems design as well as dominant socially constructed paradigms of ‘mental health’ and ‘mental illness’ and employment. Misinformation is discussed according to the contemporary dominant paradigm of ‘recovery’ as well as web resources, discrimination and employment. Disinformation is considered in terms of media myths and stereotypes and vocational rehabilitation. Multidisciplinary collaboration is required to meet the ICT needs of this diverse group.
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