Today is the 20th World Mental Health Day. Orchestrated by the World F terjemahan - Today is the 20th World Mental Health Day. Orchestrated by the World F Bahasa Indonesia Bagaimana mengatakan

Today is the 20th World Mental Heal

Today is the 20th World Mental Health Day. Orchestrated by the World Federation for Mental Health and supported by the World Health Organisation, the annual event has sought to improve awareness of mental health, and to bring it to parity with physical health as a medical priority worldwide.
Much has been achieved since the event began two decades ago. Investment in mental health care has increased around the world, and there is a growing recognition that mental health demands the same rigorous clinical attention as a broken leg or a dodgy heart.
And yet, as if on cue, two articles published this week have demonstrated quite how much we have yet to achieve.
The first of those articles, published in the Sunday Times (but handily reproduced on Alastair Campbell's blog, since The Times removed itself from public discourse by installing a paywall), has already been the subject of a so-called 'Twitterstorm' – that increasingly common, and increasingly short, social media phenomenon. On Monday, India Knight attracted the ire of mental health charity Mind, following an article in which she derided as narcissistic those who talk about depression. There is, she insists, no longer a taboo surrounding mental health issues. We are free to talk, so why go on about it?
"I can't say it enough," Knight wrote. "There is no stigma."
Knight was quick to insist that she had been misquoted by Mind, that her irritation solely concerns celebrity depression memoirs. She conducted herself startlingly poorly on Twitter, referring to those who took issue with the article as "deranged." Mind twisted her quotes, but as originally published Knight's views are those of someone with no understanding of mental health problems. Stripped of its Christmas bestseller-bashing hook, the crux of her column is twofold: that there is no longer any stigma attached to depression, and that depression is not a potentially fatal illness
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Today is the 20th World Mental Health Day. Orchestrated by the World Federation for Mental Health and supported by the World Health Organisation, the annual event has sought to improve awareness of mental health, and to bring it to parity with physical health as a medical priority worldwide.Much has been achieved since the event began two decades ago. Investment in mental health care has increased around the world, and there is a growing recognition that mental health demands the same rigorous clinical attention as a broken leg or a dodgy heart.And yet, as if on cue, two articles published this week have demonstrated quite how much we have yet to achieve.The first of those articles, published in the Sunday Times (but handily reproduced on Alastair Campbell's blog, since The Times removed itself from public discourse by installing a paywall), has already been the subject of a so-called 'Twitterstorm' – that increasingly common, and increasingly short, social media phenomenon. On Monday, India Knight attracted the ire of mental health charity Mind, following an article in which she derided as narcissistic those who talk about depression. There is, she insists, no longer a taboo surrounding mental health issues. We are free to talk, so why go on about it?"I can't say it enough," Knight wrote. "There is no stigma."Knight adalah cepat untuk menegaskan bahwa dia telah dikutip oleh pikiran, bahwa iritasi Nya semata-mata menyangkut selebriti depresi memoar. Dia dilakukan dirinya mengejutkan buruk pada kegugupan, merujuk kepada orang-orang yang mengambil isu dengan artikel sebagai "gila." Pikiran memutar kutipan nya, tetapi sebagai awalnya diterbitkan Knight's pandangan adalah orang-orang dari seseorang yang tidak memahami masalah kesehatan mental. Dilucuti dari Natal yang paling laku-bashing hook, inti dari kolom adalah dua kali lipat: bahwa tidak ada apapun stigma yang melekat pada depresi, dan bahwa depresi tidak penyakit yang berpotensi fatal
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