The media and mental health: media familiarity with nationwide standards for reducing mental illness and suicide

Date

2013-08-01

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Kansas State University

Abstract

Mental illness and suicide present vexing challenges for journalists who seek to elevate public understanding of public health issues and remedies. Using the theoretical frameworks of media agenda setting and issue framing, content analysis was used to examine a nationwide sample of newspapers stories for evidence of media familiarity with prevailing norms for community mental health care and suicide prevention. Stories examined showed little evidence of such expertise, leaving questions about the ability of journalists — and their readers — to differentiate between standard and substandard mental health care systems. Long-term change in public policy about mental illness and suicide prevention will likely depend on the ability of special interests to capture and keep media attention as well as media management decisions to assign mental health coverage to general assignment reporters or place it in the hands of journalists with specialized training.

Description

Keywords

Mental health, Mental illness, Suicide, Suicide prevention, Media coverage

Graduation Month

August

Degree

Master of Science

Department

Department of Journalism and Mass Communications

Major Professor

William Adams

Date

2013

Type

Thesis

Citation