Mental health concerns have intensified worldwide, particularly among adolescents and young adults living within digitally saturated environments. Rising rates of anxiety, depression, loneliness, and self-harm have moved mental health from the margins of public discourse to the center of cultural, institutional, and communicative life. In this context, public relations (PR) increasingly functions as a key site through which organizations participate in conversations about psychological wellbeing. This manuscript argues that contemporary mental health campaigns reflect an important shift in public relations practice: away from message dissemination and reputation management alone and toward relational engagement grounded in listening, trauma awareness, and psychological insight. Drawing on relationship management theory, dialogic theory, organizational listening, trauma-informed communication, and affective neuroscience, this study proposes an integrative framework that conceptualizes public relations as emotional stewardship. Through an interpretive analysis of six prominent campaigns—Spotify’s Take a Beat, ASICS’ Desk Break, Maybelline’s Brave Together, CALM’s silent advertisement, WWF’s nature prescription initiative, and McDonald’s United Kingdom Happy Meal redesign—this manuscript examines how organizations employ psychological insight, participatory storytelling, and symbolic disruption to foster trust and reduce stigma. Three central conclusions emerge. First, effective mental health campaigns are rooted in structured listening systems that privilege stakeholder voice and emotional context. Second, campaigns informed by neuroscientific principles such as emotion regulation, cognitive interruption, and social proof tend to produce stronger engagement and relational credibility. Third, authentic external advocacy depends upon internal organizational alignment, including attention to practitioner wellbeing and psychological safety. By synthesizing theory and practice, this manuscript positions mental health communication as an increasingly important frontier of ethical strategic communication and argues that emotionally attuned public relations is both a moral obligation and a strategic necessity.
Gayle Pohl, Ph.D., APR (Thu,) studied this question.