Shouldnt general mental health education be a feature of the education system & society in general.
We spend millions on anti-smoking & responsible use of acohol - and thats fair enough - but a few bob towards educating people about mental health issues would be money well spent. A recent report said most people dont know that they can get help or where to get it.
If we keep the "big house with high walls" philosophy then its not surprising the general population will have little understanding of people with mental illness. I dont really buy the view that giving info about mental health "puts the idea of suicide" into peoples minds.
I genuinely think that its a popular pecreption that anyone who is or was ill is "permanently gone", a constant danger to themselves and others. This is not true for the majorty, it is true for a minority and to deny that might be to not care appopriately for the minority. Maybe its the 'therapy culture' of the US but I'd imagine theres a bit more openness about it there, in Ireland people tend to recoil in fear if it comes up in conversation, or resort to easy sterotypes - "sure wasnt he in hospital before..." (nuff said being the implication).
We spend millions on anti-smoking & responsible use of acohol - and thats fair enough - but a few bob towards educating people about mental health issues would be money well spent. A recent report said most people dont know that they can get help or where to get it.
If we keep the "big house with high walls" philosophy then its not surprising the general population will have little understanding of people with mental illness. I dont really buy the view that giving info about mental health "puts the idea of suicide" into peoples minds.
I genuinely think that its a popular pecreption that anyone who is or was ill is "permanently gone", a constant danger to themselves and others. This is not true for the majorty, it is true for a minority and to deny that might be to not care appopriately for the minority. Maybe its the 'therapy culture' of the US but I'd imagine theres a bit more openness about it there, in Ireland people tend to recoil in fear if it comes up in conversation, or resort to easy sterotypes - "sure wasnt he in hospital before..." (nuff said being the implication).