Newspaper Depictions of Mental Health Disorders in Japan: An Opportunity for Enquiry-Based Learning

Yume Suzuki, Minami Doi, T. Stone
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Abstract

and suicide are mentioned in three major Japanese newspapers. Methods: An exploratory descriptive study i) using purposive sampling over a six-month period of the three Japanese newspapers with the widest circulation and ii) document analysis reliant on 37 keywords relating to mental illness iii) selected after consultation with a range of mental health experts across Japan. Results: Nearly a quarter (23.3% n=1827) of the articles related to suicide, self-death, self-kill-ing. ‘Stress’ was by far the most frequently mentioned term (n=740) an average of 4.1 times a day. Others included suicide/suicidal/self-killing (442), mental disorder (80), mental illness (69), depression (93), psychotic/psychosis (42). Conclusion: Overall the tone and content of the articles relating to mental health did not contain a great deal of stigmatizing content. The keyword “stress” might have appeared more than would normally be the case as the sampling period coincided with the beginning of the COVID19 pandemic. Research activities like this encourage student-centered, enquiry-based learning that leads to reflection on the nature and extent of evidence-based professional education and practice that involve critical thinking.
日本报纸对精神健康障碍的描述:一个探究性学习的机会
和自杀都出现在日本的三大报纸上。方法:一项探索性描述性研究i)对发行量最大的三家日本报纸进行为期六个月的有目的抽样,ii)根据与精神疾病相关的37个关键词进行文献分析iii)在咨询了日本各地的一系列心理健康专家后选择。结果:近四分之一(23.3% n=1827)的文章与自杀、自残、自杀有关。到目前为止,“压力”是被提及次数最多的词汇(n=740),平均每天4.1次。其他包括自杀/自杀/自杀(442人)、精神障碍(80人)、精神疾病(69人)、抑郁症(93人)、精神病/精神病(42人)。结论:总体而言,心理健康相关文章的语气和内容不包含大量的污名化内容。关键词“压力”可能比正常情况下出现得更多,因为采样期恰逢covid - 19大流行的开始。像这样的研究活动鼓励以学生为中心,以探究为基础的学习,从而反思以证据为基础的专业教育和实践的性质和范围,包括批判性思维。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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