AI Article Synopsis

  • Mental health issues have become more prominent globally, particularly due to the effects of COVID-19, with media depictions influencing public understanding and attitudes toward these issues.
  • The study employs qualitative narrative analysis to evaluate mental health representation in a popular TV series, focusing on narrative coherence and fidelity in relation to the Chronic Care Model (CCM) and different literacy types.
  • Findings indicate that while the main character's experiences reflect aspects of effective mental health management, inconsistencies in literacy levels reveal challenges in portraying realistic mental health scenarios, highlighting the need for improved health literacy and better care strategies.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Mental health and delivery of care is a global issue, that was only magnified by COVID-19. Over the past 3 years, people's time spent watching television increased, while the way that mental health care was delivered changed. Audiences can gain insight into mental health issues through positive or negative mediated depictions on television. We argue that mental health is a chronic condition and the importance of literacy through different domains is critical for how the characters in media content and audience viewers make sense of mental health.

Method: The current study uses qualitative narrative analysis to examine the narrative probability and fidelity at the intersection of mental health depictions, the chronic care model, and different types of literacy in the award-winning series, .

Results: Findings reveal that Randall's experiences with mental health ( = 38 episodes) depict moments of narrative coherence and fidelity to varying degrees. We see Randall's experiences align most with the self-management support and community elements of the CCM, but the overall depiction is unbalanced. Randall's literacy level is high, but if inspected on a deeper level, analysis points to differing levels of health and mental health literacy, thus enabling and constraining positive and realistic portrayals of mental health.

Discussion: Implications for mental health as a chronic issue and care delivery through CCM are discussed along with the importance of different types of literacy for audience members who may be struggling with a mental health disorder or trying to navigate the health care system. We offer recommendations for using Randall's narrative as a teaching tool, integrating CCM into clinical visits to help guide delivery of care and understand literacy levels, and finally future work should continue this line of work from an Entertainment-Education perspective.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10312097PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2023.1204973DOI Listing

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