• Aucun résultat trouvé

Stigma Facts ENG 0

N/A
N/A
Protected

Academic year: 2022

Partager "Stigma Facts ENG 0"

Copied!
1
0
0

Texte intégral

(1)

What is stigma?

 Stigma (or prejudice) describes a negative and unfavourable attitude.

 Stigma causes those living with a mental illness to be labelled, stereotyped, and feared.

What is discrimination?

 Discrimination is the action that results from stigma.

 It is how you treat those living with mental health issues because of how you think about them.

Why does it matter?

 Many people living with mental illness say the stigma is worse than the illness itself.

 Stigma is seen as one of the key barriers preventing people from seeking help.

 Seven million Canadians will need help for mental health concerns this year alone.

 Many will not get it because of the stigma attached to the illness.

 Every single Canadian is affected by mental health issues – either directly with firsthand experience, or indirectly in someone they know.

 Every day, 500,000 Canadians do not go to work due to psychiatric reasons.

 Mental illness costs the Canadian economy an estimated $33 to $50 billion per year in lost productivity.

Imagine if you broke your leg, and your friends and family decided you were only looking for attention when it affected your ability to walk? Imagine if everyone around you treated you as if

you had a serious character flaw because of that leg? How likely would you be to admit you had a problem? How likely would you be to seek treatment?

There is hope. Recovery is possible.

There are effective treatments.

Mental illness is an illness like any other.

It’s important to seek help.

But we all have a role to play.

Références

Documents relatifs

That consultation process became the basis of the report of a Senate Committee that I chaired called “Out of the Shadows At Last.” It was the first report produced in Canada

In 2010 the Mental Health Commission of Canada commissioned a study to fill a gap in pan–Canadian information about the number of people living with mental health problems and

Support was high for the features presented and the roundtable discussions describing what is needed to achieve an accessible mental health system, with four fifths (79%)

Mental illness-related stigma, including that which exists in the healthcare system and among healthcare providers, has been identified as a major barrier to access treatment

We examine issues at the micro (peer support and peer research), mezzo (local site/committees), and macro (national) levels. We discuss ways to prevent stigma and discrimination,

Part I was a study by Cotton and Coleman (2008) of the curricula related to mental illness that are taught in Canadian police colleges and police academies. The purpose

• Additional strategies suggested for improving how people with mental illness perceive and interact with the police included: (a) building stronger linkages between the police

Coleman,  T.  &  Cotton,  D.  (2005).  A  Study  of  Fatal  Interactions  between  Canadian  Police  and  Mentally  Ill  Persons.    Presented  at