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Distant Voices Still Lives: reflections on the impact of media reporting of the cases of Christopher Clunis and Ben Silcock

Cummins, ID

Authors



Abstract

One of the main features of the reform of the Mental Health Act (2007) was the introduction of Community Treatment Orders (CTOs). CTOs represent a fundamental shift in the rights of people with severe mental health problems, who have been detained in hospital under section 3 MHA and subsequently discharged. The call for the introduction of CTOs or similar legislation has been a feature of mental health policy over the past twenty years. Despite the detailed discussion of the relationship between ethnicity and psychiatry, very has been little attention to the way that race was a factor in the community care scandals of the 1990s. This article, through the consideration of two very high profile cases Christopher Clunis and Ben Silcock, explores the media’s influence on the construction of the debate in this area. In particular, it explores the way that the media reporting of the two cases had a role in not only perpetuating racial stereotyping but also the stigmatizing of those experiencing acute mental health problems. In addition, with the use of government papers obtained under the Freedom of Information Act, it considers the response to and attempts to influence the media debate at that time.

Citation

Cummins, I. (2010). Distant Voices Still Lives: reflections on the impact of media reporting of the cases of Christopher Clunis and Ben Silcock. Ethnicity and Inequalities in Health and Social Care, 3(4), 18-29. https://doi.org/10.5042/eihsc.2011.0074

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date Dec 1, 2010
Deposit Date Apr 20, 2011
Journal Ethnicity and Inequalities in Health and Social Care
Print ISSN 1757-0980
Publisher Emerald
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 3
Issue 4
Pages 18-29
DOI https://doi.org/10.5042/eihsc.2011.0074
Keywords race, media, deinstitutionalisation, mental illness
Publisher URL http://dx.doi.org/10.5042/eihsc.2011.0074