CU Boulder students create PSA to illuminate language that stigmatizes mental illness
Consider the following comments you wouldnât be surprised to overhear in a coffee shop:
âSheâs so bipolar! One day sheâs happy, and the next sheâs completely depressed.â
âYeah, that guy is completely schizo, totally unpredictable.â
âMan, Iâm so OCD about what shoes to wear.â
Each one makes colloquial use of a word or shorthand phrase related to a mental-health diagnosisâbipolar disorder, schizophrenia, obsessive compulsive disorder. All are not just imprecise and misleading, but also have the potential to stigmatize people with mental illness.
âWhy do we casually insult others with mental health labels such as âpsychoâ or âinsaneâ?â asks Meagan Taylor, a 2002 journalism graduate who is now studying integrative physiology at the Âé¶čÊÓÆ”. âWe will never get rid of stigma unless we can change our underlying perceptions of mental illness, and that begins partly with how we use our words.â
So, she decided to do something about it. Tasked with creating an outreach project for her abnormal psychology class, Taylor workedÌęwith Andrew McGraw, a film studies major, and Lisa Solheim, a former CU art major who is now a mental-health advocate, to create a short public-service video to highlight the problem of stigmatizing language. That was published this week.
âWe donât go around saying âthatâs so gayâ anymore, or calling people âretards,â because we realized that the way we used those words could be harmful to people who overhear them,â Taylor says. âOur underlying attitudes need to change, so language has to change, and bringing attention to this is a start.â
Taylor and McGrawâwho met while working for CUâs Emergency Medical Servicesârecruited volunteers to talk about their experiences with language that stigmatizes mental illness. After conducting pre-interviews, they sat conducted on-camera interviews on April 13.
âThere is really a desire in the market to tell these kinds of stories, to challenged peopleâs reality and use of language,â says McGraw, who began making films for YouTube in high school. âI like telling stories that make a difference, make people question their world and challenge them to do better.â
Besides their student volunteers, Taylor and McGraw also turned the lens on Solheim, who has served on the speakerâs board for the nonprofit Mental Health Partners.
Mental illness isnât the same as someone whoâs just screwed up. The guy in Las Vegas who shot up all those people? There was no evidence of mental illness.â
âA lot of times, somebody says âschizophrenicâ and they mean somebody whoâs just having a hard time or something,â Solheim says. âBut mental illness isnât the same as someone whoâs just screwed up. The guy in Las Vegas who shot up all those people? There was no evidence of mental illness.â
But tossing out âmentally illâ any time someone does something harmful or anti-social is surprisingly common, says Solheim, and that can reinforce harmful stereotypes. Solheim recalls the time she sat down for an interview with a man who was renting a room in his house. After he told her he was an alcoholic, she decided to open up about her diagnosis.
âI thought, âWow, weâre admitting our foibles here,â and said, âWell, Iâm schizophrenic,ââ she says. âHis immediate reaction was to say, âYou arenât going to come kill me in the middle of the night, are you?ââ
Polls have found that 60 percent of Americans believe people with mental illness are âlikelyâ to act violently toward others. While some studies have found a slight correlation between certain specific diagnoses and violence, more refined investigation has found that other factors, including substance abuse, childhood abuse and family history, are more important.
The 2005 MacArthur Violence Risk Assessment Study at the University of Virginia, for example, controlled for substance use and other environmental factors and found no significant difference in the rates of violence among people with mental illness and other people living in the same neighborhood.
Taylor, who plans to become a physicianâs assistant, said her work as a volunteer at a hospital and working in emergency services increased her compassion for people with mental illness. She hopes the PSA will be a small step to help change the way we use language.
âThe mental-health community and their allies need to stand up for proper use of terminology, stop casual labels, and promote language empathy if we want people with mental illness to be culturally integrated,â she wrote in her proposal for the PSA.
âWeâre not talking about political correctness or policing language,â she says. âWeâre talking about being sensitive human beings.â
is taught by Professor June Gruber.