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No Longer a Sign of Weakness? Media Reporting on Mental Ill Health in Sport

Keith D. Parry, Abigail G. Braim, Rebecca E. Jull, and Matthew J. Smith

According to NHS England ( 2020 ), one in four adults will experience some form of mental ill health during their lifetime. Despite the prevalence of mental ill health, there is a long-standing public stigma attached to mental illness and toward those suffering with its affects ( Bauman, 2016

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“We Love You, Katie”: A Critical Discourse Analysis of Stanford University’s Response to the Passing of Katie Meyer

Natalie Bunch, Lauren Beasley, and Janie Copple

health stigma can manifest in two ways: public stigma or self-stigma ( Corrigan, 2004 ). Public stigma refers to the societal pressure and negative attitude toward engaging in help-seeking behaviors for mental health, whereas self-stigma results from a person internalizing these negative messages

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“This Isn’t a Sports Story … This Is a Life Story”: Elite Athletes and Myths About Mental Illness in Sport

Scott Parrott

athletic injury on life satisfaction among recently retired collegiate male athletes . The Sport Psychologist, 13 ( 2 ), 144 – 156 . https://doi.org/10.1123/tsp.13.2.144 Pescosolido , B.A. , Halpern-Manners , A. , Luo , L. , & Perry , B. ( 2021 ). Trends in public stigma of mental illness in