Make It OK helps us face mental illness, overcome stigma – theperrynews.com

Posted: March 23, 2020 at 2:47 pm


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Even during these stressful times, mental illness is a hard subject for many to discuss openly. The Make It OK campaign works to reduce the stigma of mental illness and increase understanding about it.

Make It OK encourages us to start conversations based on facts.

Fact 1: Mental illness is common. One out of every five adults will experience a mental illness during life. Persons of all ages, races and income levels are diagnosed.

Fact 2: Most mental illnesses can be treated effectively with medication, therapy, diet, exercise and support. Mental illness, like any disease, is a medical condition not a character flaw. It can neither be fixed through will power nor can the ill person just snap out of it.

Fact 3: Stigma can keep people from seeking help and can derail progress toward healing. Stigma a psychological effect of ignorance, prejudice and cruelty is a form of social shaming, such as the use of negative slang when describing mental illness, categorizing all mentally ill persons as the same, avoiding the mentally ill and discriminating against them.

Make It OK offers these tips for supporting persons with mental illness:

Stop the silence. Its okay to talk about it. Show kindness. Listen. Keep in contact with ill persons. Dont ignore the disease. Offer to help.

As an example of these tips, think about if someone you know has cancer. You ask how theyre doing today and whether you can give them a ride to an appointment or babysit their children while they go to the clinic. Why dont we do that with persons suffering from mental illness?

Its been said that mental illness is the no casserole disease. When someone has surgery, friends bring a casserole. Not so with mental illness. Ironically, persons suffering from mental illness may have trouble coping with daily tasks and appreciate help.

There are resources to help you learn more about mental illness and help you follow through with your good intentions, such as the National Alliance on Mental Illness, the National Federation of Families for Childrens Mental Health and the Make It OK website.

The Dallas County Health Navigation program can also assist you in connecting to mental health treatment, support groups and health insurance. Call them at 515-993-3750.

Ann Cochran is the health navigation coordinator in the Dallas County Public Health Department.

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Make It OK helps us face mental illness, overcome stigma - theperrynews.com

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March 23rd, 2020 at 2:47 pm

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