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Mental Health and the Media: From Illness to Wellbeing

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Mental Health and the Media: From Illness to Wellbeing. / Atanasova, Dimitrinka; Koteyko, Nelya; Brown, Brian et al.
In: Sociology Compass, 20.03.2019.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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APA

Atanasova, D., Koteyko, N., Brown, B., & Crawford, P. (2019). Mental Health and the Media: From Illness to Wellbeing. Sociology Compass, Article e12678. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1111/soc4.12678

Vancouver

Atanasova D, Koteyko N, Brown B, Crawford P. Mental Health and the Media: From Illness to Wellbeing. Sociology Compass. 2019 Mar 20;e12678. Epub 2019 Mar 20. doi: 10.1111/soc4.12678

Author

Atanasova, Dimitrinka ; Koteyko, Nelya ; Brown, Brian et al. / Mental Health and the Media : From Illness to Wellbeing. In: Sociology Compass. 2019.

Bibtex

@article{ab643da357fe4ab39a7b98ccdb1426c5,
title = "Mental Health and the Media: From Illness to Wellbeing",
abstract = "The media are a main source of information about mental health for many people and an ever-growing body of literature is evaluating their coverage of the topic. To help keep track of such research, several comprehensive but now dated literature reviews have been published. We assess more recent studies (2007-2017) and suggest future directions by integrating (1) the {\textquoteleft}circuit of mass communication{\textquoteright} model from media and communication studies which posits that production, content and reception need to be analysed for an in-depth understanding of the media, (2) the holistic view of mental health as comprising both illness and wellbeing and (3) the critical psychiatry literature questioning the assumptions underlying psychiatric knowledge and practice. We find that recent studies have focused on content and {\textquoteleft}the illness side{\textquoteright} of mental health by examining the representation of particular mental disorders and events involving individuals with specific diagnoses. We identify as a promising development the growing interest in {\textquoteleft}the wellbeing side{\textquoteright} of mental health whereby authors have started to analyse recovery messages. We invite more production and reception research and more critical content studies which use diagnostic labels cautiously and analyse the representation of people with mental health problems as the victims of violence.",
author = "Dimitrinka Atanasova and Nelya Koteyko and Brian Brown and Paul Crawford",
year = "2019",
month = mar,
day = "20",
doi = "10.1111/soc4.12678",
language = "English",
journal = "Sociology Compass",
issn = "1751-9020",
publisher = "John Wiley & Sons, Ltd",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Mental Health and the Media

T2 - From Illness to Wellbeing

AU - Atanasova, Dimitrinka

AU - Koteyko, Nelya

AU - Brown, Brian

AU - Crawford, Paul

PY - 2019/3/20

Y1 - 2019/3/20

N2 - The media are a main source of information about mental health for many people and an ever-growing body of literature is evaluating their coverage of the topic. To help keep track of such research, several comprehensive but now dated literature reviews have been published. We assess more recent studies (2007-2017) and suggest future directions by integrating (1) the ‘circuit of mass communication’ model from media and communication studies which posits that production, content and reception need to be analysed for an in-depth understanding of the media, (2) the holistic view of mental health as comprising both illness and wellbeing and (3) the critical psychiatry literature questioning the assumptions underlying psychiatric knowledge and practice. We find that recent studies have focused on content and ‘the illness side’ of mental health by examining the representation of particular mental disorders and events involving individuals with specific diagnoses. We identify as a promising development the growing interest in ‘the wellbeing side’ of mental health whereby authors have started to analyse recovery messages. We invite more production and reception research and more critical content studies which use diagnostic labels cautiously and analyse the representation of people with mental health problems as the victims of violence.

AB - The media are a main source of information about mental health for many people and an ever-growing body of literature is evaluating their coverage of the topic. To help keep track of such research, several comprehensive but now dated literature reviews have been published. We assess more recent studies (2007-2017) and suggest future directions by integrating (1) the ‘circuit of mass communication’ model from media and communication studies which posits that production, content and reception need to be analysed for an in-depth understanding of the media, (2) the holistic view of mental health as comprising both illness and wellbeing and (3) the critical psychiatry literature questioning the assumptions underlying psychiatric knowledge and practice. We find that recent studies have focused on content and ‘the illness side’ of mental health by examining the representation of particular mental disorders and events involving individuals with specific diagnoses. We identify as a promising development the growing interest in ‘the wellbeing side’ of mental health whereby authors have started to analyse recovery messages. We invite more production and reception research and more critical content studies which use diagnostic labels cautiously and analyse the representation of people with mental health problems as the victims of violence.

U2 - 10.1111/soc4.12678

DO - 10.1111/soc4.12678

M3 - Journal article

JO - Sociology Compass

JF - Sociology Compass

SN - 1751-9020

M1 - e12678

ER -