Daily News Updates

Thursday, 21 September 2017

WISH Supports Qatar-Based Participants on U.S. Mental Health Journalism Program

QATAR-base Journalists selected by the World Innovation Summit 
for Health (WISH) have received expert training in mental health journalism 
at the Carter Center in Atlanta, Georgia, U.S., as part of the Rosalynn Carter 
Fellowships for Mental Health Journalism (RCJF) program. 
Journalists who formed the inaugural cohort of participants from Qatar in 
September 2016 were invited back to the Carter Center for this year’s RCJF 
gathering, which ran from September 11-13. They were joined by one of two new 
Qatar-based program participants who will spend the coming year developing a 
range of stories that highlight issues relating to mental health.
The RCJF program was established by former U.S. First Lady Rosalynn Carter 
in 1996. Since then, it has provided journalists around the world with valuable 
insights into mental health, offering a unique opportunity for participants to 
improve public understanding of mental health issues and help reduce the 
discrimination faced by people with mental illnesses.
The year-long program was brought to Qatar in 2016 as a result of a partnership 
between WISH and The Carter Center. WISH’s involvement with The Carter Center 
was first discussed in March 2015, when former U.S. President Jimmy Carter and 
former First Lady Rosalynn Carter traveled to Doha and met with representatives 
from WISH. During the meeting, areas of potential collaboration to achieve the 
shared goal of advancing mental health policy were explored. 
The Carter Center subsequently invited WISH to select a number of journalists to 
take part in the program.
Commenting on the collaboration with WISH, former First Lady Rosalynn Carter said: 
“We are delighted to work with the World Innovation Summit for Health to provide 
training and support for journalists in Qatar who seek to produce in-depth and 
accurate reporting of mental health issues and who share our desire to 
destigmatize mental illnesses.
“Too often we only hear about mental health in the news following a crisis or a 
tragic event. Yet, every day millions of people around the world living with 
mental illnesses go to work, care for their children, and contribute to their 
communities. They are valuable members of society, and their stories 
deserve to be told.”
The first cohort of fellows from Qatar – Tarek Bazely, Buthaina Al Janahi, 
Aney Mathew, and Kathy Hearn – traveled to Atlanta in September 2016, 
where they received advice and training from experts in the field and gave 
details of mental health journalism projects they planned to undertake during 
the year of their fellowships. They returned to Atlanta this month to give 
presentations to the former U.S. First Lady on the work they’d undertaken to 
highlight mental health issues since joining the program, as well as to the 
program’s task force members, and advisory board. 
Speaking about his year taking part in the program, Tarek Bazley, Science and 
Technology editor, Al Jazeera English, said: “The fellowship with the Carter 
Center and our engagement with WISH has enriched and added depth to our 
global coverage of the universal issue of mental health.”
Buthaina Al Janahi, columnist at Al Arab newspaper, added: “This program helps 
journalists become the catalysts for reform around mental health policies.”
The two new fellows who have joined the 2017-18 program are Jawahir 
Al-Naimi, Assistant Producer at Al Jazeera English, and Samira Barre, a freelance 
writer and filmmaker who is also co-founder of Hersare Foundation, a Somali 
NGO supporting vulnerable and neglected people in Somalia and 
the Horn of Africa.
Barre was able to travel to this year’s gathering in Atlanta despite Hurricane 
Irma, which curtailed the plans of many of those from around the world 
planning to attend. Over the coming year, she aims to explore the need for and 
benefit of the existence of a strong support system for people living with mental 
illness and the impact that mental illness has on families. Al-Naimi did not 
travel to Atlanta but joined the meeting via video conference and spoke of her 
plans to use her fellowship year to raise awareness in Qatar about post-partum 
depression and in particular to identify the social factors that prevent mothers 
from seeking help.
Sultana Afdhal, acting Chief Executive Officer of WISH, accompanied the 
Qatar-based fellows to Atlanta. She said: “At WISH we have a long-standing 
commitment to raising awareness on mental health, and we believe that the 
media plays a crucial role in shaping public perception. Our partnership with 
The Carter Center offers an excellent opportunity to develop the highest standards 
of mental health reporting in Qatar. We are delighted to continue our partnership 
for the second year running, especially after seeing the positive impact of the work 
done by last year’s fellows.”
Since the Rosalynn Carter Fellowships for Mental Health Journalism were 
established, fellows have produced more than 1,500 stories, documentaries, 
books, and other works during and after their fellowship year. Their projects 
have garnered Emmy Awards, nominations for the Pulitzer Prize, and a range 
of other prestigious awards.
WISH is an initiative of Qatar Foundation for Education, Science and 
Community Development. Its partnership with the Carter Center 
underscores its longstanding commitment to raising awareness of issues 
around mental health, and developing evidence-based research to address 
related policy challenges, such as those facing dementia and autism. 

Culled from: https://www.albawaba.com/business/pr/wish-supports-qatar-based-participants-us-mental-health-journalism-program-1024106

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4bn people worldwide without social protection —ILO

4bn people worldwide without social protection —ILO

https://populationreports.blogspot.com.ng/