The Carter Center does good work to help promote de-stigmatizing mental health information and journalism, so I thought this announcement was worth reproducing here to help them publicize this year’s fellowship awards.
After receiving a record number of applicants, the Carter Center’s Rosalynn Carter Fellowships for Mental Health Journalism — the only journalism fellowships exclusively for mental health — announced today the winners of its 2009-2010 awards (see below for full list of fellows and their project topics). Since 1996, the fellowship program has educated more than 100 journalists, who set the standard in their field for accurate and sensitive portrayals of mental health issues.
“Journalists have a very important role to play in shaping the public’s perception of mental illnesses,” said former First Lady and Carter Center Co-founder Rosalynn Carter. “If a news piece or a book shows what mental illness is really like, people will understand that mental illnesses happen to so many of us, and fortunately, even the most serious mental illnesses can be treated and most people can recover.”
Mental health problems are typically under-reported compared to other health issues, and the fellowships allow journalists to remain in their own newsrooms, pursuing topics that may not otherwise be brought to the public’s attention (see below for examples of fellows’ projects).
Each domestic fellow is awarded a stipend of US$10,000 to study and report on a particular issue within the field for one year and receives training on covering mental health issues from leading experts. Currently, fellowships also are offered to two journalists from South Africa and two from Romania, and they receive a comparable stipend.
Previous fellows have produced more than 300 stories, documentaries, books, and other works. Fellows’ projects have garnered awards from Mental Health America (formerly the National Mental Health Association), the American Psychological Association, Amnesty International, and the Association of Health Care Journalists, as well as Emmy and Pulitzer Prize nominations.
The fellowships are part of the Carter Center’s Mental Health Program, which works around the world to reduce stigma and discrimination against people with mental illnesses and decrease incorrect and stereotypical information. In addition, The Carter Center conducts pioneering work on many other health fronts, including spearheading the historic campaign to eradicate Guinea worm disease, integrating neglected disease prevention, and building health infrastructure in some of the world’s most impoverished communities.
The 2009-2010 Recipients of the Rosalynn Carter Mental Health Journalism Fellowships
The U.S. recipients are:
Rachel Aviv
Freelance Journalist
Brooklyn, NY
Topic: Report on the mental health needs of children in rural areas and focus on the stories of families that have relinquished custody of their children in order to have mental health care provided to them.
Elizabeth Bernstein
The Wall Street Journal
Brooklyn, NY
Topic: Examine the impact of the economic recession on people with mental illnesses.
Michael Biesecker
The News and Observer
Durham, NC
Topic: Investigate the treatment of people with mental illnesses and developmental disabilities in North Carolina’s jails and prisons.
Nicolae Ciorogan
WHDH-TV (NBC) Boston
Arlington, MA
Topic: Produce a television series on how immigrants from different cultures cope with depression in a family member.
Tamara Jeffries
Freelance Journalist
Durham, NC
Topic: Explore the issue of postpartum depression in African-American women.
Joanne Silberner
National Public Radio
Washington, DC
Topic: Produce radio stories on the treatment of mental illnesses in developing countries.
The South African recipients are:
Glynnis Horning
Freelance
Durban, South Africa
Topic: Examine depression and the stigma surrounding it in South Africans living with HIV/AIDS.
Metzi Van der Merwe
SABC Radio News
Cresta, South Africa
Topic: Produce a series of radio stories on the accommodation of people with mental illnesses into the workplace.
The Rosalynn Carter Fellowships would like to acknowledge their partnership with the South African Depression and Anxiety Group (SADAG), Johannesburg, South Africa.
The Romanian recipients are:
Georgiana Ilie
Freelance Journalist
Bucharest, Romania
Topic: Reveal the mental health problems associated with family loss as a result of a lack of support systems for affected families.
Răzvan Vintilescu
Cotidianul, Realitatea-Catavencu Media Group
Bucharest, Romania
Topic: Examine the Romanian mental health care system.
The Rosalynn Carter Fellowships would like to acknowledge their partnership with the Center for Independent Journalism, Bucharest, Romania.
4 comments
The Carter Center does good work to help promote de-stigmatizing mental health information and journalism
They declare a stigma, the sentence above is declarative.
Women here, educated women like Ms Carter, refuted the stigma of rape. Curious she would now declare another.
Harold A. Maio, retired Mental Health Editor
8955 Forest St
Ft Myers FL 33907
239-275-5798
[email protected]
the name mental health journalism claims my attention because not many journalists, including myself in Liberia have had any training in this area of our noble profession. Coming out of a long period of armed conflict,mental health illness, especially among young people is of common place in our streets and communities, but are rarely noticed by the local media perhaps because of the lack of training in the area. Please consider me the first Liberian applicant for your 2009/2010 fellowships for mental health journalism. I work for the catholic-owned Radio Veritas in Monrovia as a news editor and currently acting news coordinator.
I agree with you that issues of mental health illnesses receive less coverage. so the questions I often ask myself as a journalist about people suffering from mental illnesses are; how did it happen to them, what is responsible, can all mental health patients be cured, and how can the media help in providing education and awareness for the public to generate sympathy and care for such people?
I am a current Human Services student. I plan on becoming a youth advocate and later a high school counselor with my degree. I am 26 years old, and have been a writer most of my life. I believe the work that I do will help immensely.
If you want a community to thrive, you must make sure the next generation is well taken care of. This is something about the mental health profession that has been proven over and over. In this day and age of so much technology increasing at such high rates, it is very easy to get caught up in the external and not listen to your inner voice.