• Breaking News

    Friday, January 2, 2015

    The Power of Words: Addressing the Stigma of Mental Illness


    Jenna Bowen, medical student, University of Wisconsin


    Reviewed by Claudia Reardon, MD







    Crazy.  Insane.  Deranged. Mad.  Lunatic. —Misused as nouns, adjectives and
    lay-diagnoses, their use perpetuates stereotypes of the wide variety of people
    who experience mental illness.


    Maybe you know someone or, more likely, a number of people who
    experience depression, anxiety, bipolar disorder or other brain disorders.  According to the National Institute of Mental
    Health, 1 in 4 American adults and 1 in 5 American youth experience a form of
    mental illness every year. People with mental illness are teachers, accountants,
    neighbors, sisters, fathers and friends. Anyone you know could be experiencing
    mental illness, but afraid to come forward and be treated. Maybe that person is
    you.


    People living with mental illness continue to have an identity
    that is beyond a diagnosis, similar to other medical conditions. While managing
    mental illness may be challenging at times—similar to challenges faced by
    people with diabetes, high blood pressure, or other medical illness— there is
    greater difficulty in getting the treatment needed because of feelings of shame
    and stigma surrounding mental illness. However, treatment for mental illness
    works. Research shows the majority (65 percent to 80 percent) of individuals
    with mental disorders will improve with appropriate treatment
    and ongoing
    monitoring.
    People with mental illness need to know that they will continue
    to be seen as people – your brother, best friend, daughter —and not “crazed” or
    “insane” if they appropriately seek help for a treatable medical condition that
    they happen to be experiencing.



    Bring Change 2 Mind, an organization aimed to end stigma and
    discrimination surrounding mental illness, offers recommendations to reduce
    your impact on the stigma surrounding those with mental illness.





    • Use "person first" vocabulary. When we say a person is
      schizophrenic, we make their mental illness fully define their identity.
      Instead, be clear that this is a disease that individuals manage and live with—
      "He is living with schizophrenia."

    • Avoid the verb "suffers" when discussing mental illness.
      Instead, choose, "lives with mental illness" or "is affected by
      mental illness."

    • There are many phrases and terms; "crazy,"
      "nuts", "psycho", "schizo", "retard"
      and "lunatic" that may seem insignificant, but really aren't.





    Be an advocate for those that you know, and the many that you
    don’t know, who are living with some form of mental illness by breaking down stigma,
    and being conscious of language surrounding brain disordersTo learn more check
    out:


    ·        
    Bring
    Change 2 Mind


    ·        
    NAMI
    – Stigma Busters








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