| Want
help? Then let me film inside psychiatric wards
October
22, 2004
Eleanor
Bradford,
BBC Scotland's health correspondent, wants mental health units to
help reduce the stigma of mental health by allowing her to film
inside wards. She explains why
.....
Nearly two years ago, a high-profile strategy was launched to reduce
the stigma of mental illness. The 'see me' campaign is funded by
the Scottish Executive health department and backed by five mental
health charities.
We,
the media, have been put under the microscope. Journalists, including
me, received flyers warning us that we were being watched. We were
told labels like 'psycho', 'nutter' and 'weirdo' were no longer
acceptable. Quite right.
But
now I would like to extend this initiative - with a very Scottish
slogan. I would like to suggest the launch of a 'see you' campaign.
I
want to be able to present mental illness in the same way as any
other illness of the body, and I want the NHS to stop making it
extraordinarily difficult for me to do so.
Let
me give you a typical example. Earlier this year I was putting together
a story about anti-depressants. The Scottish Association for Mental
Health found two excellent interviewees for me.
Both
were engaging, articulate and witty - exactly the kind of people
who illustrate that mental illness can affect anyone.
We
arranged to meet at the psychiatric hospital which treated them.
When
I arrived with my camera crew, we were shown into the office of
one of the interviewees, who now works on the patient council. As
an office it was fine, but for the viewer it was rather uninteresting.
So
I asked if we could film somewhere else in the hospital. The hospital
manager said 'no'. I asked if we could go outside into the pleasant
gardens. We were told we were absolutely forbidden to film anywhere
except for that dull, cramped office. The reason we were given was
'patient confidentiality'.
This
is a get-out clause often used by managers who fail to see the bigger
picture.
Patient
confidentiality means we can't film people in hospital without their
permission. The solution is quite simple - we ask them.
If
it's inappropriate to identify patients, we can film in a way that
they can't be recognised, and if it's really not an option, then
we can film areas of the hospital where there aren't any patients.
As
a health correspondent, I've been doing this for three years in
other hospitals without complaint.
What
could possibly have been the harm in filming an interview in the
flower-filled grounds of the hospital that day?
Our
interviewees told us that the only person we were likely to encounter
would be a local walking their dog - probably a good image to send
out to all those communities who are resisting much needed medium-secure
units because they're worried about safety.
The
reason I find this particularly frustrating is because I used to
work in a medium-secure unit and I know they can be pleasant, cheerful
places and not at all what the public probably expects.
Broadcasting
pictures of them on TV, as we do with other wards, would probably
remove some of the stigma of being admitted.
It
would also help me to cover stories on mental health issues, which
receive far less attention than, say, cancer or heart disease.
I
now find myself in the ridiculous situation of having more pictures
of Victorian mental institutions in the BBC library than of modern
psychiatric units.
More
recently I have been filming a young boy who has Asperger's syndrome.
His mum was nervous about the filming because he was in the process
of changing schools and she didn't want him marked out by a news
story. She asked him what he thought and he told her he wanted to
take part.
"Mum", he said, "I've got nothing to be ashamed of."
'see me?' - as a journalist I'm happy to be scrutinised. 'see you?'
- open up, if you have nothing to be ashamed of.
*
This article is reproduced with permission from The
Point magazine, published by the Scottish Association for Mental
Health
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