References
- Day DM. (1985). Portrayal of mental illness in the media: A content analysis of Canadian Newspapers. Available from: http://search.proquest.com/docview/303400749?accountid=14244
- Gitlin T. (1980). The whole world is watching. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press
- Goffman E. (1974). Frame analysis: An essay on the organization of experience. New York: Free Press, Boston: Northeastern University Press
- Gould M, Greenberg N, Hetherton J. (2007). Stigma and the military: Evaluation of a PTSD psycho educational program. J Traum Stress, 20, 505–15
- Greden JF, Valenstein M, Spinner J, et al. (2010). Buddy-to-Buddy, a citizen soldier peer support program to counteract stigma, PTSD, depression, and suicide. Ann NY Acad Sci, 1208, 90–7
- Gross K, D'Ambrosio L. (2004). Framing emotional response. Polit Psychol, 25, 1–29
- Gross K. (2008). Framing persuasive appeals: Episodic and thematic framing, emotional response, and policy opinion. Polit Psychol, 29, 169–92
- Gross K. (2007). Covering crime in Washington DC: Local television news coverage of crime and its effect on emotional response. Conference Papers – International Communication Association, 1
- Harrell MC, Berglass N. (2011). Losing the battle: The challenge of military suicide. Center for a New American Security. Retrieved from Berglass. Available from: http://www.cnas.org/files/documents/publications/CNAS_LosingTheBattle_HarrellBerglass.pdf
- Hertog JK, McLeod DM. (2001). A multiperspectival approach to framing analysis: A field guide. In: Reese S, Gandy O, Grant A, eds. Framing public life: Perspectives on media and our understanding of the social world. Mahwah (NJ): Lawrence Erlbraum, 139–61
- Hindman DB. (1996). Community newspapers, community structural pluralism, and local conflict with nonlocal groups. Journalism Mass Commun Q, 73, 706–21
- Holman L. (2011). Building bias: Media portrayal of postpartum disorders and mental illness stereotypes. Media Rep Women, 39, 12–9
- Holt LF, Major LH. (2010). Frame and blame: An analysis of how national and local newspapers framed the Jena Six controversy. Journalism Mass Commun Q, 87, 582–97
- Iyengar S. (1991). Is anyone responsible? How television frames political issues. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press
- Jamison KR. (1998). Stigma of manic depression: A psychologist’s experience. Lancet, 352, 1053
- Matas M, el-Guebaly N, Harper D, et al. (1986). Mental illness and the media: Part 11. Content analyses of press coverage of mental health topics. Can J Psychiatry, 31, 431–3
- Nawková I, Nawka A, Adámková T, et al. (2012). The picture of mental health/illness in the printed media in three central European countries. J Health Commun, 17, 22–40
- Neuman WR, Just MR, Crigler AN. (1992). Common knowledge. News and the construction of political meaning. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press
- Pan Z, Kosicki GM. (1993). Framing analysis: An approach to news discourse. Polit Commun, 10, 55–75
- Riffe D. (1990). Media roles and legislators’ news media use. Journalism Q, 67, 323–9
- Sayer NA, Spoont M, Murdoch M, et al. (2011). A qualitative study of U.S. veterans' reasons for seeking Department of Veterans Affairs disability benefits for posttraumatic stress disorder. J Traum Stress, 24, 699–707
- Schreiber M, McEnany GP. (2015). Stigma, American military personnel and mental health care: Challenges from Iraq and Afghanistan. J Ment Health, 24, 54–9
- Sieff EM. (2003). Media frames of mental illness: The potential impact of negative frames. J Ment Health, 12, 259–69
- Wahl OF. (1999). Telling is risky business: Mental health consumers confront stigma. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press
- Wahl OF. (2003). News media portrayal of mental illness: Implications for public policy. Am Behav Sci, 46, 1594–600
- Wood D. (2012). Iraq, Afghanistan war veterans struggle with combat trauma. Available from: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/07/04/iraq-afghanistan-war-veterans-combat-trauma_n_1645701.html [last accessed 10 May 2015]