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          Words
         Matter: Reporting on Mental Health
         Conditions 
          
         
         Words Matter:
         Reporting on Mental Health Conditions 
         
          
         
         One in five Americans experiences a mental health
         disorder in any given year. Many will receive treatment and
         recover or learn ways to live with their condition. Yet
         headlines about mental health too often focus on rare,
         sensational cases that lead to violence or death. 
         
         The media plays a critical role in
         advancing our understanding of mental illness and substance
         disorders. How you report stories about individuals with
         mental health challenges can increase awareness and reduce
         stigma around these conditions. 
         
         Following are useful tips for covering
         mental illness accurately. Remember that the American
         Psychiatric Association (APA) is available to answer your
         questions and connect you with experts in this
         field. 
         
         Questions to Ask When Reporting on
         Mental Health 
         
         
            - Is mental illness relevant to this
            story? If not, there is no need to mention
            it.
 
            
            - What is your source? Dont
            rely on hearsay to report that a person has a mental
            illness. If you are reporting on a specific condition,
            make sure you are talking to a mental health professional
            to provide the facts. The APA can connect you with
            experts to discuss a wide range of mental health and
            substance use disorders, as well as the medications and
            techniques used to treat them.
 
            
            - What is the most accurate language
            to use? See below for advice about language that is
            specific and avoids derogatory terms.
 
          
         
         Choose Your Words
         Carefully 
         
         The words you use to write about
         mental health are very important, and can help reduce stigma
         around mental illness if carefully chosen. Focus on the
         person, not the condition. 
         
         The basic concept is that the mental
         health condition (or physical or other condition) is only
         one aspect of a persons life, not the defining
         characteristic. 
         
         
            - Preferred: She is a person with
            schizophrenia.
 
            
            - Not preferred: She is
            schizophrenic.
 
          
         
         Be specific. Mental illness is
         a general condition.Specific disorders are types of mental
         illness and should be used whenever possible (see below for
         a brief list and definitions of common
         disorders). 
         
         
            - Preferred: He was diagnosed with
            bipolar disorder
 
            
            - Not preferred: He was mentally
            ill
 
          
         
         Avoid derogatory language.
         Terms such as psycho, crazy and junkie should not be used.
         In addition, avoid words like suffering or
         victim when discussing those who have mental
         health challenges. 
         
         
            - Preferred: She has a mental health
            illness. She has a substance use disorder.
 
            
            - Not preferred: She suffers from
            mental illness. Shes a drug abuser.
 
          
         
         Facts about Mental
         Illness 
         
         Misconceptions and myths about mental
         health are unfortunately common. Following are a few facts
         about mental illness in the United States, as well as key
         resources for the latest statistics on mental
         health. 
         
         
            - In any given year, one in five
            adults in the United States has a diagnosable mental
            disorder.
 
            
            - One in 24 adults has a serious
            mental illness.
 
            
            - One in 12 has a substance use
            disorder.
 
            
            - Half of all chronic mental illness
            begins by age 14.
 
            
            - Suicide is the 10th leading cause
            of death for all ages. It is more common than
            homicide.
 
            
            - People with mental illnesses are
            no more likely to be violent than those without a mental
            health disorder. In fact, those with mental illness are
            10 times more likely to be the victims of violent
            crime.
 
          
         
         Common Mental Health
         Terms 
         
         Following are definitions of some of
         the most common mental health disorders. For more complete
         descriptions, please consult Understanding Mental Disorders:
         Your Guide to DSM-5® or the Diagnostic and Statistical
         Manual of Mental Disorders (both available from APA
         Publishing). 
         
         
            - addiction is a chronic brain
            disease that causes compulsive substance use despite
            harmful consequences
 
            
            - alcohol and substance use
            disorders refer to the overuse of alcohol or drugs
            leading to effects that are detrimental to the
            individuals physical and mental health, or the
            welfare of others
 
            
            - Aspergers syndrome is one of
            a range of neurological disorders within the autism
            spectrum
 
            
            - autism spectrum disorders are a
            range of complex developmental disorders that can cause
            problems with thinking, feeling, language and the ability
            to relate to others
 
            
            - bipolar disorder, also commonly
            known as manic depression, is a brain disorder that
            causes shifts in a persons mood, energy and ability
            to function
 
            
            - depression is a common and serious
            medical illness that causes feelings of sadness and/or a
            loss of interest in activities once enjoyed; it can lead
            to a variety of emotional and physical
            problems
 
            
            - eating disorders are illnesses in
            which people experience severe disturbances in their
            eating behaviors and related thoughts and emotions;
            anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa and binge eating
            disorder are the three main types
 
            
            - obsessive compulsive disorder
            (OCD) is an anxiety disorder in which people have
            recurring, unwanted thoughts, ideas or sensations
            (obsessions) that make them feel driven to do something
            repetitively (compulsions)
 
            
            - posttraumatic stress disorder
            (PTSD) is a psychiatric disorder that can occur in people
            who have experienced or witnessed a traumatic event such
            as a natural disaster, a serious accident, a terrorist
            act, war/combat, rape or other violent personal
            assault
 
            
            - schizophrenia is a chronic brain
            disorder with symptoms that can include delusions,
            hallucinations, trouble with thinking and concentration,
            and lack of motivation.
 
          
         
         Source: www.psychiatry.org/newsroom/reporting-on-mental-health-conditions
          
           
         
          
            
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