Anti Stigmatization
Stigma, Children and Mental Illness
The tragedies of Columbine and similar incidents have led to impassioned calls for increased mental health services for children and adolescents. While there is little doubt that increases are needed and long overdue, this focus alone overlooks an important fact. Even when services are available, children and their parents often fail to make use of them. Although research has revealed that nearly one in five adolescents experience a psychiatric problem, most, including those who acknowledge and express concern about those problems, do not seek professional help.
One factor that contributes to this troubling statistic is stigma. The negative attitudes about mental illnesses that pervade public thinking are hardly exclusive to the adult population. Children learn from a very early age that psychiatric problems are seen as failures of character and will and that those who admit to such problems or receive psychiatric treatment are likely to be avoided and looked down upon by their peers. Even second and third graders appear to have already assimilated the idea that people with mental illnesses are to be viewed less favorably than others.
From where do these negative views come? Certainly, they are influenced by the attitudes and behaviors of adults. Children are witness to disparaging references of those who are disliked or who have divergent opinions as “crazy,” “nuts” or “insane.” Children hear adults complain about people driving “like madmen” or behaving “like lunatics” when they are upset. Children are aware of the hushed and embarrassed tones used by adults when referring to relatives who have undergone psychiatric treatment. In other words, children learn easily that it is bad to be associated with labels that indicate a psychiatric problem.
Children are also indoctrinated to negative beliefs about mental illness through the entertainment media. Films for children often provide stigmatizing images and ideas. Take, for example, Good Burger, a recent film based on the popular Nickelodeon series, Keenan and Kel. Within this whimsical children’s movie is a sequence at the Demented Hills Asylum, where the heroes encounter unkempt psychiatric patients in straitjackets who do things like disrupt a card game by eating the cards and growl menacingly at visitors. For somewhat older children, a recent chart-topping MTV video by the music group N’Sync (entitled “I Drive Myself Crazy”) provided similar images of spaced-out psychiatric patients in straitjackets and padded cells, with the repetition of lyrics featuring the word “crazy.” These stereotypes label people with mental illnesses as frightening, unattractive and undesirable. They are being established or perpetuated within impressionable, young minds.
It is small wonder, then, that children and adolescents do not seek psychiatric help. They believe that to seek help would identify them as one of those unlikable persons they have seen or heard about and leave them vulnerable to ridicule and rejection. As Tipper Gore observed in a May 1999 Time magazine article: “If we are serious about stopping the violence and helping our children, adults need to erase the stigma that prevents our kids from getting the help they need for their mental health.”
Fighting the stigma of mental illness-a task that includes changing the sometimes stigmatizing ways we ourselves refer to mental illness and challenging the media images that communicate negative stereotypes to our children and adolescents-is a fundamental task for helping to ensure that available mental health services will be used successfully by children and their families.
Source: National Mental Health Association, Stigmatizing Media Images Affect Children, by Otto Wahl, Ph.D.
Related Articles
Sunday, September 7, 2008
- The Anti-Psychiatry Movement
- Vaccines - A Two-Edged Sword
- Should Doctors Have Guns?
- Extremist Muslim Doctors Do More Than Heal
- Woman Comparable to Men in Domestic Violence: Stereotypes and their Consequences
- The Bipolar Trend
- The Implications of Implanted Chips
- Anti-Smoking Campaign Doesn't Mess Around
- The Science of Brain Freeze
- The Biopsychosocial Model of Health & Illness
- Unhinging from Theory: Autism and Opinions
- God And Religion: Is It All In Our Heads?
- Encephalon, Thirty-Third Edition
- Is War A Psychosis?
- Meditation for Troubled Minds: Can the Mind Heal the Mind?
- Mind-Body: We Want Evidence, Don't We?
- Usually It's Cheaper to Pay Than to Go To Court
- Acknowledging Vaccination Concerns
- Integrating Schizophrenia Management
- Rabies Virus Helps Deliver Drugs into the Brain
- A Baby’s Smile - Mom’s Natural High
- When “Alternative” Isn’t Anymore - The Ketogenic Diet in Epilepsy
- Life in a Bubble - The Dangers of Triclosan
- The Dark Side of Antibiotics
- Stroke’s Little Known Complication - Pain
- Laughter is the Best - and Possibly Oldest - Medicine
- Epilepsy - Social and Cognitive Considerations
- New Treatment for Alzheimer’s Disease?
- When the Doctor is the Patient
- The Gift of Life - Part 2
- Drugs and Pharmacology, Tenth Edition
- Are Drug Reps Really Necessary?
- Can Drug Therapy Prevent Parkinson’s Disease?
- Medicine and the Law - Part 6: Third Party Liability
- Go For The Gold, It May Prolong Your Life
- When It Comes to Health, Adults Shortchange Kids
- Is Seeing Into the Future More Than an Optical Illusion?
- Malignant Medicine
- Putting an End to Medicare Fraud
- The Gift of Life - Part 1
- My son has Tuberous Sclerosis, his seizures are well controlled under heavy medi...
- I guess the problem is certainty. To control for all the factors and show that ...
- Irrational & inappropriate use of antibiotics is hugely adding up to drug re...
- It's great to see all those niche blogs out there. Congrats for joining 9rules!...
- Is there really no better translation possible?
“Something which has never occu...
- What an excellent post! Thank you!...
- Laughter Therapy is mentioned in the Bible (Proverbs 17:22) but more recently do...
- i am not sure about this but there is a virus that can "cure",in any form or wha...
- no matter how many times we change nations, government, weapons, peace strategie...
- but still, a little chuckle here and a little laugh there makes everyone feel be...
- is it the same as when you dive into a pool on a winter evening and some water e...
- Are there any trials happening in around the London area?...
- ARE ANY TEST SITES NEAR CENTRAL FLORIDA? TAMPA BAY AREA IN PARTICULAR. IF SO, F...
- Cool opinions,but some doctors are careless.They are just concerned about their ...
- I can't stop the N=1 studies on myself with free Lyrica samples....
- This is really great information. I just recently signed up to be on the regist...
- Thank you! My son recently had a bone marrow transplant and I stand in awe of a...
- Thanks for including my IC Disease site in the blog carnival! I posted a link b...
- Hey thanks for the addition to the carnival - much appreciated!!
Barry B...
- Please reread the article. The chip contains a 16 digit ID number, the equivale...
Advertisement
Sponsored Links
Online Criminal Justice Degrees, Insurance, Home Loans, Free Movies, California DUI Lawyer, Tattoo, Health Insurance, Drug Rehabilitation, Mesothelioma Lawyer, Hydroxycut, Custom Rubber Stamps, Trasylol Lawyer, Baptism Gifts , mesothelioma cancer , Biotin Side Effects , vehicle tracking , vasectomy reversal , Plano Family Lawyer , hilarious t-shirts , Free Insurance Quotes.
Neuroscience & Neurology
September 06, 2008 | 0 Comments | By RD, MD
A Baby’s Smile - Mom’s Natural High
More In Neuroscience & Neurology
- When “Alternative” Isn’t Anymore - The Ketogenic Diet in Epilepsy
- Stroke’s Little Known Complication - Pain
- Can Drug Therapy Prevent Parkinson’s Disease?
- Is Seeing Into the Future More Than an Optical Illusion?
- When Age Is Just A Number
Neuroscience & Neurology
Opinion
August 27, 2008 | 2 Comments | By Sajid Surve, DO
The Gift of Life - Part 2
More In Opinion
- Are Drug Reps Really Necessary?
- Malignant Medicine
- The Gift of Life - Part 1
- Medical Students Can Make A Difference
- Can this Economic Downturn Lead to Better Psychosocial Health?
Opinion
Psychiatry & Psychology
August 15, 2008 | 2 Comments | By Jennifer Gibson, PharmD
The Mental Health of our Military
More In Psychiatry & Psychology
- Sleep and Consciousness - A Dynamic State of Being
- Finding New Ways to Treat Depression
- Dying To Be A Good Mom - Eating Disorders In Pregnancy
- The State of Mental Healthcare in Prison
- Treating Psychiatric Disorders - Something Smells Fishy


Leave a Reply