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Journal Article

Citation

Shrivastava S, Kalra G, Ajinkya S. Indian J. Psychiatry 2015; 57(4): 407-411.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, Medknow Publications)

DOI

10.4103/0019-5545.171840

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Mass media including television, internet, and newspapers influences public views about various issues by means of how it covers an issue. Newspapers have a wider reach and may affect the impact that a news story has on the reader by factors such as placement of the story within the different pages. We did a pilot study to see how two English newspapers from Mumbai, India were covering psychiatry related news stories. The study was done over a period of 3 months. We found a total of 870 psychiatry related news stories in the two newspapers over 3 months with the majority of them being covered in the main body of the newspapers. Sex-related crime stories and/or sexual dysfunction stories received the highest coverage among all the news while treatment and/or recovery related stories received very little coverage. It is crucial that the print media takes more efforts in improving reporting of psychiatry-related stories and help in de-stigmatizing psychiatry as a discipline. © 2015 Indian Journal of Psychiatry | Published by Wolters Kluwer - Medknow.


Language: en

Keywords

human; suicide; India; dementia; autism; pilot study; psychiatry; schizophrenia; psychosis; mental illness; mood disorder; conduct disorder; substance abuse; mental disease; sexual dysfunction; automutilation; sexual crime; anxiety disorder; mass medium; publication; attention deficit disorder; Article; newspapers; print media

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