Stigma Has No Place In Mental Health

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By Amy R. Stapleton, MS, LCPC, NBCC
Manager of Bereavement Services
Family Centered Grief Support
Chesapeake Life Center

Where does it hurt? That’s the question so many children need to be asked.

May is Children’s Mental Health Awareness Month. While one in five children experience a mental health condition in a given year, nearly 50% of adolescents between the ages of 8 and 15 are experiencing a condition and do not receive treatment. In a time when more people are aware of mental health, and potentially more access to services, why then is there a disconnect? Stigma.

Mental health professionals like myself are grateful for the increasing presence of public awareness campaigns like #EndingTheSilence by National Alliance on Mental Illness, or the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration’s National Mental Health Day, which shines a light on the need to consider mental health essential to a child’s development. And while celebrities and professional athletes like Cleveland Cavaliers basketball player Kevin Love (who wrote the article “Everyone Is Going Through Something”) are breaking the silence by sharing their own struggles, there is still more to be done by us as a nation and community to make mental health a priority.

Parents, schools and communities need to break down barriers. Meeting children and teens where they are — with support rather than shame, with compassion and acceptance rather than mistrust — requires that as adults, we look first at ourselves and our own internalized messages about mental health. What were the spoken and unspoken messages that we inherited from our families’ reinforced shame? What is the unintentional impact of a “push through the pain” approach to mental health in children and teens that implies weakness rather than an acknowledgment a legitimate hurt that needs addressing?

In a culture where children and teens are often measured and assessed by achievements and valued for what they do rather than for who they are, we as adults, parents, mental health professionals and community leaders have the opportunity and responsibility to change the narrative on mental health and make it a priority.

As a clinical mental health professional specializing in working with kids, teens and families who are grieving, I often see stigma continue after a death. Deaths by suicide and substance use are complicated by the fact that, often, these losses cannot be acknowledged by society or publicly mourned. Children and teens learn to internalize this response and further isolate themselves when there is a reinforcement that there are limits to what we can talk about or discuss openly.

We do not hesitate to treat our children when they are hurt physically or suffer an illness that can be diagnosed by a pediatrician. We should never hesitate to take seriously our children when they are hurting emotionally, psychologically or spiritually. Here are some resources that can help start the process of normalizing mental health:

Stigma keeps people silent. It has no place in the conversation about mental health. Each person has a right to be acknowledged and valued in life, and death, without judgment.

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