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StigmaWatch |
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What is stigma?
Stigma against people with a mental illness often involves inaccurate and hurtful representations of them as violent, comical, or incompetent. The media play a major role in influencing public attitudes, and this includes attitudes to mental illness. That's why the StigmaWatch program was established, to tackle these attitudes at the source.
SANE reduces stigma in the media by improving community understanding of mental illness and its treatments through publications and resources, ongoing work with the media and through the StigmaWatch program.
SANE StigmaWatch monitors media portrayals of mental illness and suicide, to ensure they are accurate and respectful. It takes the media to task when these topics are covered inaccurately or irresponsibly, and – through the ‘Good News’ area – congratulates them on good coverage.
How StigmaWatch works
Reports
from the public are verified before the media is contacted
with an explanation of the harm stigma causes. Responses are posted in
the StigmaWatch Files. Some serious cases of stigma, for example promotion by Locos Burritos restaurant and an article in FHM (For Him Magazine), are taken further
and involve a national media campaign or complaint to the Press Council.
Would you like to be alerted to
StigmaWatch media campaigns?
StigmaWatch Report 2007
SANE
produces the annual StigmaWatch report, a summary on how the media has
fared in undertaking balanced reporting of mental illness. Read the verdict.
StigmaWatch in partnership
Mindframe
is the Commonwealth Department of Health and Ageing's national strategy
for promoting responsible and accurate reporting of suicide and mental
illness in the media. It is shaped and guided by the National Media and
Mental Health Group.
Achievements include a twelve month study - Media Monitoring Project
- of how journalists portray suicide and mental illness in the media
and introducing journalism students to the concepts of safe reporting
of suicide and non-stigmatising of mental illness through The ResponseAbility Project
SANE StigmaWatch and the SANE Media Centre are supported by the Friends of SANE and receives funding from the Australian Government Department of Health and Ageing
under the Australian Government's National Mental Health Strategy and
National Suicide Prevention Strategy through the Mindframe National
Media Strategy.
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