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Newspaper Coverage of Mental Illness: Is It Changing? 

Authors: Otto E. Wahla; Amy Wooda; Renee Richardsa
Affiliation:   a George Mason University,
DOI: 10.1080/10973430208408417
Publication Frequency: 4 issues per year
Published in: journal American Journal of Psychiatric Rehabilitation, Volume 6, Issue 1 Spring 2002 , pages 9 - 31
Formats available: PDF (English)
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Abstract

Because the public gets much of its knowledge of mental illness from the news media, it is important to understand what those media report about mental illnesses. It is also useful to know whether or not news coverage of mental illness is changing. The current study looked at 300 newspaper articles containing the key phrase “mental illness” from 6 different newspapers for 1989 and for 1999. Each article was read and rated with respect to a variety of elements, including what specific disorders were named, what the main themes of each article were, and what was the overall tone of the article. Results indicated that there was more coverage of issues of stigma and mental health insurance parity, fewer themes of dangerousness, and fewer articles with negative tone in 1999 than in 1989. However, dangerousness was still the most common theme of 1999 articles and negative articles were still twice as likely to occur as positive ones. Articles in 1999, as in 1989, tended not to name specific psychiatric disorders, tended not to describe the symptoms of those disorders named, and rarely included the perspectives of mental health consumers.
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