This study analyzes the general public's framing of 'mental health' and critically assesses the implications of these findings. A mismatch between how people think about mental health and what messages are used in mental health campaigns may hinder attempts to improve mental health awareness and reduce stigma. We have conducted frame analysis by using a combination of topic modeling and sentiment analysis, examining 10 years of mental health-related tweets (n = 695,414).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe global burden of mental health disorders has increased steadily during the past decade. Today, mental illness is the leading cause of total years lived with disability. At the same time, global mental health policies and budgets fall short of addressing the societal burden as mental health discourse languishes in the shadows due to stigma.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn Hungary, the decline of traditional peasant culture and its heritage has prompted urban revivals, leading to the acceptance of traditional Hungarian folk singing as a performing arts genre. Drawing from a series of in-depth interviews, this study shows how contemporary Hungarian folk singers navigate (define, learn, police) different forms of authenticity within the field of folk music. While we find that objectified authenticity - heritagized classification systems - is the dominant form of symbolic capital, the broader symbolic economy of authenticity is complicated by competing definitions of folk singing as, variously, culture, heritage, and art.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn the summer of 1991 a human outbreak of Salmonella enteritidis infection occurred following a barbecue in which about 100 persons were involved. Eggs, supplied by one or more of 10 different layer farms, were the most probable source of the infection. To identify the S.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBroiler flocks are frequently infected with Campylobacter jejuni. The origin of the infection is still unclear. The question of whether colonization of flocks results from transmission of C.
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