With Small Power, Comes Great Responsibility: Lessons Learned from an Evaluation of Veteran and Military Mental Health Public Awareness Campaigns

2019 ◽  
Vol 55 (8) ◽  
pp. 1322-1325
Author(s):  
Joie D. Acosta ◽  
J. Scott Ashwood ◽  
Terry L. Schell ◽  
Jennifer L. Cerully
Author(s):  
Charlotte Ryan

In building public support for social change, activists in communities of color routinely approach broader audiences via news media. Communities of color, however, routinely face disparities that limit their access to media including local news media outlets. This lack of access mirrors inequalities in political, social, and economic arenas and can slow public awareness campaigns to address disparities in health, environmental, and other quality-of-life issues. I describe two community-based collaborative action research studies that documented and challenged how local television newscasts underrepresented and misrepresented three communities of color in Boston. The linkage between communication rights and campaigns to address quality-of-life issues is presented, as well as unresolved challenges in the collaborative research process. The study has implications for environmental health campaigns.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joie Acosta ◽  
Jennifer Cerully ◽  
Eunice Wong ◽  
Elizabeth Petrun Sayers ◽  
Mikhail Zaydman ◽  
...  

2013 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
pp. 67-72 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Beirne ◽  
N. Mohungoo ◽  
S. Buckley

IntroductionStigma towards mental health disorders remains a significant problem in society. Numerous public awareness campaigns and, to a lesser extent, educational interventions have been carried out to date to help address this issue.MethodA brief questionnaire was formulated and administered to two small groups of transition year students from schools throughout Ireland who participated in a week-long placement in a Psychiatric Hospital in Dublin in 2012. The input was from psychiatry and allied health professionals covering a wide range of mental health topics. It was administered before the first session and immediately after the last session. The input for each group in terms of topics was almost identical.ResultsIn all, 24 students participated, and the majority had either gone to school with, had observed in passing, or had a friend of the family or a relative with a mental illness, although only 21% had had knowledge on mental illness up to the intervention. The post-intervention scores demonstrated that the week had an impact on most of these views. Their attitudes to individuals with mental illness as regards employment, treatment, assistance, and recovery were encouraging, even at baseline, and all their responses improved following the sessions. There was a view that those with mental illness were somewhat reluctant to seek professional help.ConclusionsAlthough the results of this study are very encouraging as regards attitudes towards mental health and their response to education, far more research and interventions are needed to explore and address stigma in more detail.


10.18060/1880 ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 98-111 ◽  
Author(s):  
Randall C. Nedegaard ◽  
Rachel E. Foster ◽  
Mercy Yeboah-Ampadu ◽  
Andrew J. Stubbs

America has been at war for almost 10 years. Because of this, continuing missions in the Middle East require the support and cooperation of our allied North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) forces from around the world. In this paper we provide an overview of the mission at Kandahar Air Field (KAF) and the Multi-National Role 3 hospital located at KAF. Next, we explain the mental health capabilities and unique perspectives among our teammates from Canada, Great Britain, and the United States to include a discussion of the relevant cross-cultural differences between us. Within this framework we also provide an overview of the mental health clientele seen at KAF during the period of April 2009 through September 2009. Finally, we discuss the successes, limitations, and lessons learned during our deployment to Kandahar, Afghanistan.


2020 ◽  
pp. 255-275
Author(s):  
Christopher Lee Atkins

Like other chapters, the author takes the reader on a journey of a combat social worker beginning in his childhood as the son of a Vietnam veteran with severe PTSD. With the valuable lessons learned from his father’s mental health treatment journey with the help of the early 1980s Vet Centers. The author shares his life experiences and lessons gleaned from a career as a trauma therapist and finally a 16-year career as an Army social worker, including lessons from Iraq combat tour and the Army’s comprehensive soldier fitness program. Research-based theories, books, and interventions are described critical to healing PTSD and empowering the holistic well-being of today’s service members. The author, currently an Army lieutenant colonel behavioral health officer concludes with a call for reinforcements due to increasing attrition of combat social workers, and the corresponding traits and mindset required for this dynamic career opportunity in today’s military mental health community.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joie Acosta ◽  
Jennifer Cerully ◽  
Eunice Wong ◽  
Elizabeth Petrun Sayers ◽  
Mikhail Zaydman ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 33-41
Author(s):  
Ebenezer Odji ◽  
Wilson Truman Okaka ◽  
Johnson Yekini Obe ◽  
Blessing Chidubem Ario ◽  
Deborah Oluwapelumi Adelakun

This paper asserts that public awareness creation and raising (ACR) adopting local-visual-evidences (LVE) have already been established by studies as an effective health communication strategy that can be employed to alleviate the outbreaks of communicable diseases. The purpose of the paper is to establish the major challenges of effective implementation of this important risk communication strategy. This study was informed by relevant good practice, lessons learned, and the results of previous studies on awareness creation (AC) with a focus on communicable diseases in Nigeria. This review examined the probable prospects and challenges of adopting LVE-based AC contents to provide policymakers, public health, and safety agencies accessible information for effective decision-making options. The preliminary findings revealed that the use of LVE-based AC information services or contents is not favourable for the patients, their families, or friends when appropriate precautions are not taken. The same also applies to the government, public awareness communication campaigners or content designers, and their development partners or sponsors. However, the paper found that LVE-based public awareness communication campaigns would be effective in curbing the outbreaks of communicable diseases if effectively conducted at the community level. It is highly recommended that public awareness communication practitioners, governmental and non-governmental organisations, involved in communicable disease management and prevention, know that participatory community engagement leads to higher awareness for behaviour change. The study proposed a LVE Adoption Pattern to guide decision-makers in crisis situations.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document