Signing the Mental Health Media Charter

The Laidlaw Foundation has joined a list of 50+ organisations, including Grazia UK, Girlguiding, and the Men & Boys Coalition, in signing activist Natasha Devon's Mental Health Media Charter.
Signing the Mental Health Media Charter
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What does this mean?

Writer and campaigner Natasha Devon created the Mental Health Media Charter in 2017, with the support of Samaritans, Mental Health First Aid (MHFA) and Beat. 

The charter consists of "7 simple guidelines for ensuring imagery and language used in mental health reporting is responsible, genuinely educational and stigma-reducing."

By signing the charter, the Laidlaw Foundation pledges to take care of the words we choose when we talk about mental health, in order to challenge the stigma attached to mental ill health, and normalise discussing it in a responsible, respectful, and informed way. 

We encourage everyone to join us in signing the charter - taking responsibility for the way your words/actions affect others, and accounting for the needs of the most vulnerable members of the population are fundamental elements of leading with integrity. Find out more and sign here

(You can also get a cool badge!)

What are the 7 guidelines? 

Taken from the Mental Health Media Charter website.

DON'T:

1. Use the phrase ‘commit suicide’ or ‘successful suicide’.

The term ‘commit’ suggests criminality and blame. We now understand that suicide happens when pain exceeds resources for coping with pain. It is not a criminal act in the UK and has not been since 1961. 

‘Successful suicide’ contravenes what we now understand about the act – most people who take their own life are ambivalent, in that part of them wants to live. 

Best alternative: ‘Died by suicide’ 

Other options: ‘Attempted/completed suicide’, ‘took/ended their own life’.

2. Show ‘before’ images in eating disorder stories or pictures which could be triggering to people who self-harm.

For people who are in a healthy mindset, seeing ‘before’ pictures of people in the grips of anorexia or who have self-harmed can act as a deterrent. However, for people who are either experiencing, or in recovery from eating disorders or self-harm we now understand that these pictures can become something to ‘aspire to’, or cause distress which in turn sets back their recovery. 

We also now understand that eating disorders and self-harm are mental health conditions. The lowest weight or ‘severest’ self-harm doesn’t necessarily indicate the most psychological distress. The body cannot tell the mind’s story.

3. Use the term ‘anorexics’, ‘bulimics’, ‘depressives’ or ‘schizophrenics’…

It is important to understand that a person is distinct from their illness. To label someone an ‘anorexic’ for example, suggests that they are defined by their eating disorder. This is not only unhelpful in terms of the way they are perceived by others but it might also hinder their recovery process. 

Better alternative: ‘people experiencing anorexia/bulimia/depression/psychosis’.  

4. Give too much detail on suicide/self-harm or eating disorder methodology.

We now understand that giving a lot of detail about how people have harmed themselves can inspire imitational behaviour – there is a delicate balance to be struck with your responsibility to report the facts of the case. Try to avoid going into too much detail, which will ensure the report is safe for all audiences. For more information on how to strike this balance, please see the Samaritans’ media guidelines. 

As a general rule, stories should focus on ‘whys’ not ‘hows’.

5. Use generic terms like ‘mental health issues’ when describing terrorists and other violent criminals

99% of people with mental illnesses are more likely to harm themselves than others. In establishing a link between generic poor mental health and terrorism/violent crime, stigma and fear is increased. 

Instead be specific – what mental health ‘issue’ did the perpetrator have? Was it diagnosed or is it conjecture? Was it in fact a personality disorder (being a psychopath or a sociopath is not technically a ‘mental illness’)?

You might also add a disclaimer along the lines of ‘please note most people with mental health issues/personality disorders would not commit a crime of this nature, which occur as a result of a rare combination of circumstances. We understand that the largest contributory factor is radicalisation.’

DO:

6. Understand the difference between mental health and mental ill health.

Everyone with a brain has a mental health, just as everyone with a body has a physical health. By using the term ‘mental health’ to describe mental illness, an important discussion which impacts 100% of the population is confined to one quarter of it.
 
Instead of ‘battles with mental health’ it is therefore much more helpful to say ‘issues with mental ill health’ so that the public can understand the distinction. 

7. Include links to good quality sources of support if content might trigger need for help in a reader/viewer.

The best charities and support organisations ensure their web forums are monitored for triggering content (ie users sharing self-harm or suicide techniques). They do not promote one form of therapy for financial gain but instead describe various treatment methods. They base their content on reliable evidence and have good links with research institutions.

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