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Completed 12 November 2004

Created
12 October 2009

Last updated
12 October 2009

People never see us living well: an appraisal of the personal stories about mental illness in a prospective print media sample

Investigator(s) / AuthorsNairn, R.G., & Coverdale, J.H.

 
Principal contact
Name Dr Raymond Nairn
Email Email address is not available; please contact
keadmin@tepou.co.nz for more information.
The research
Summary Having found no discussions of self-depictions 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.
Objectives Having found no discussions of self-depictions 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.
Study design 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 psychaitric 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.
Methods Qualitative
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 were titled: Ordinariness/Living Well; Vulnerability; Stigma; Crisis; and Disorder/Treatment. Ordinariness/Living Well foregrounded the role of personal strengths in living well and in overcomining adversity, particularly that associated with being stigmatized. We identified that theme as central to the ways in which these speakers depicted themselvs as recognizably human and understandable.
Conclusions 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.
Key Descriptors Media, Stigma / Discrimination
Disciplines Multi disciplinary
Settings Community
Diagnostic Categories General
Populations General Population
Other Keywords discursive resources, media depictions, mental illness, self portraits, stigma
Ethics approval Yes
Academic led Yes
Service led No
How were service users involved No involvement
Publication in peer review journal Yes
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