Time To Change, which is backed by Rethink and Mind, aims to break down the traditional stigma links of london necklaces has surrounded mental illness, and encourage people to be more tolerant, understanding and sympathetic of family, friends and colleagues who develop a mental health problem. Links of London Teddy Charm this year, a roadshow made its way across the region, calling at Durham City, Hartlepool, Sunderland, Newcastle and Blyth, where hundreds of people, including TV agony aunt Denise Links of London The Man On The Moon Charm and ex-Sunderland players Jim Montgomery and Gary Bennet, joined MPs and mayors in signing a pledge to challenge the stigma around mental health. The roadshow has now moved on, but the campaign continues. Only yesterday, children and young people who use the Links of London Two Hearts Charm Red Centre, a child and adolescent mental health unit at Darlington Memorial Hospital, took part in a ceremony to support the campaign. The youngsters gleefully smashed down a colourful wall made of cardboard boxes, representing common prejudices about people being treated for mental health problems. Sue Baker, national director of the Time To Change campaign, believes that the NHS in the North-East is probably doing more than any other region to get the message out.
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