Published on:22 October 2021
In the fifth programme, Helen Garlick presents a show which looks at mental health and suicide around people of mixed-race heritage.
Helen hears from an entertainment company which has changed the language it uses around Halloween following a conversation with the Zero Suicide Alliance.
Ashley Byrne talks to Adam Graham from Lancashire, who's set up a local peer support group after his brother took his own life.
We also hear broadcaster Dan Westwood and Freddy Chick meets the Dudes and Dogs from Bristol – a group in which some four-legged pets really are proving to be man’s best friends.

“What we were doing on an unconscious level was contributing to this negative language for mental health.” Daisy Stapeley Bunton (Corporate Entertainment Professionals)
"I talk for a living, and the irony is that I couldn’t actually speak out and ask for help when I was struggling.” Dan Westwood (actor and presenter)
“It’s an opportunity to get men out side by side change their environment, change their perspective and give them an opportunity to learn how to talk to other men and talk about emotions and feelings.” Rob Osman (Dudes and Dogs)
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Last modified: 2 December 2024