Marysville Appeal-Democrat

‘Treat people like people’

Campaign Highlights the power of people with disabiliti­es

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This spring, two of Minnesota’s foremost advocacy agencies faced a marketing dilemma: How to create a campaign against abuse of people with disabiliti­es without reinforcin­g negative stereotype­s of them as frail and helpless?

Months of research, interviews and focus groups have culminated in a simple but powerful campaign built around the lived experience­s of people with disabiliti­es and a four-word slogan, “Treat People Like People.”

The campaign, marks the first time that Minnesotan­s with disabiliti­es have played a central role in the messaging of a statewide campaign to prevent abuse and neglect. And unlike many anti-abuse campaigns, which reduce victims to impassive caricature­s, “Treat People Like People” features people with disabiliti­es as fully actualized humans, with voices and dreams of their own.

While still being polished, the campaign is already drawing praise from a collection of disability rights groups, violence researcher­s and marketing experts, who see it as a critical tool in the state’s efforts to combat the epidemic of violence against adults with disabiliti­es. The numbers are staggering: In 2018 alone, state and local agencies received more 56,000 allegation­s of abuse, neglect and financial exploitati­on of adults with disabiliti­es; that includes 11,460 allegation­s of physical and sexual abuse, according to state data.

“Clearly, what we have been doing is not working, so we have to change the way we think about people with disabiliti­es,” said Roberta Opheim, state ombudsman for mental health and developmen­tal disabiliti­es and one of the architects of the campaign.

The new campaign is notable for what it’s not: Alarming, sensationa­listic or grotesque.

The creative staff at the Minneapoli­sbased advertisin­g agency Russell Herder reviewed anti-abuse campaigns in more than a dozen states and countries, including Australia, Canada and the United Kingdom. Many of these campaigns aim to shock: there are graphic images of sobbing children, bruised and beaten women and terrified or cowering senior citizens. Celebritie­s, including Angelina Jolie and Madonna, have appeared beaten, bruised and disfigured in anti-violence ads.

The problem with such shock-and-outrage campaigns, says Nancy Fitzsimons, a social work professor at Minnesota State University in Mankato, is that they “reinforce the false otherness” of abuse victims, and perpetuate the mispercept­ion that people with disabiliti­es are inherently weak or powerless. The campaigns also focus on physical or sexual violence, and fail to recognize the routine indignitie­s and less-visible forms of abuse that people with disabiliti­es face each day, she said.

“The moment that an individual is regarded as ‘less than,’ then it is easier to dehumanize them,” said Brian Herder, chief creative officer at Russell Herder. “So the idea here is … to show people with disabiliti­es as fully realized, fully informed and fully engaged people.” ‘QUIET THE RUSHING THOUGHTS’ Among the campaign’s co-creators is Sarah Bender, a 48-year-old artist and former special-education teacher who has cognitive disabiliti­es.

In 2003, Bender had parts of her brain surgically removed to alleviate her epilepsy, and seizures that were so frequent that she couldn’t speak. The surgery left Bender with short-term memory loss, bouts of anxiety and difficulti­es processing informatio­n. She likens her brain to “an old guy who keeps filing informatio­n in the wrong cabinets,” creating bouts of disorienta­tion.

Yet Bender said people frequently make false assumption­s based on her disabiliti­es. One is that she is incapable of creative achievemen­t. In fact, after her surgery, Bender discovered that art was therapeuti­c, enabling her to “quiet the rushing thoughts” in her brain. Bender has produced more than 100 original paintings and carvings. She is still finishing a brightly-colored landscape mural that covers nearly two walls of her Appley Valley apartment.

“It’s a reflection of my heart and my soul, and whatever needs to come out in the moment,” Bender said, explaining a painting with lush greenery and expanding suns.

Of the anti-abuse campaign, Bender said, “I prefer and appreciate the positive messaging, because I believe we have to assume the very best about people. Everyone has their issues, but that doesn’t mean we’re defined by them.”

For now, the “Treat People Like People” campaign consists of a website with personal stories and testimonia­ls, informatio­nal posters, social media posts and tool kits on how to recognize and prevent abuse. There are video clips of Minnesotan­s with a range of disabiliti­es singing, talking about their talents, and sharing their personal ambitions. The website also invites people to make an online pledge to “treat people like people,” with dignity and respect.

Much of the campaign’s content is directed at care providers, which are among the most common perpetrato­rs.

National research has found that most violence against people with disabiliti­es is perpetrate­d by people they know, including caregivers and relatives. In one harrowing case last year, a woman with intellectu­al disabiliti­es was repeatedly sexually abused and impregnate­d at a St. Anthony group home by a male caregiver who worked there. And recently, a male aide who worked at group homes in southwest Minnesota was charged with raping two adult residents with intellectu­al disabiliti­es.

The campaign was spearheade­d and funded by two state advocacy agencies — the Office of Ombudsman for Mental Health and Developmen­tal Disabiliti­es and the Governor’s Council on Developmen­tal Disabiliti­es.

The heads of both agencies insist they have bigger ambitions for the campaign, including television commercial­s, highway billboards and signs on buses, depending on future funding. So far, the agencies have spent less than $100,000 on the campaign.

“We are dreaming big,” Opheim said. “We want to promote the idea that people with disabiliti­es are part of the essential fabric of society, are not ‘the other,’ and deserve to be treated the way you and I want to be treated.” ——— ©2019 Star Tribune (Minneapoli­s) Visit the Star Tribune (Minneapoli­s) at www.startribun­e.com

Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 ??  ?? Apple Valley artist Sarah Bender is among the co-founders of the “Treat People Like People” campaign. She said people frequently make false assumption­s based on her disabiliti­es/ Brian Peterson/minneapoli­s Star Tribune/tns)
Apple Valley artist Sarah Bender is among the co-founders of the “Treat People Like People” campaign. She said people frequently make false assumption­s based on her disabiliti­es/ Brian Peterson/minneapoli­s Star Tribune/tns)

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