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New Study Deepens Understanding of Effects of Media Exposure to Collective Trauma [news.uci.edu]

 

By Pat Harriman, UCI News, October 11, 2019

According to a new UCI-led study, it’s not just how much media exposure an individual has to collective trauma, but also the graphic quality of what one sees, that may make them more vulnerable to trauma-related mental and physical health problems over time. Published online in the current issue of the journal Clinical Psychological Science, the study suggests that greater frequency of viewing bloody images in the week following the bombings is associated with higher acute stress, post-traumatic stress, and other mental health issues linked to impaired functioning six months later. “Exposures to collective traumas are more complex than currently conceptualized,” says E. Alison Holman, associate professor of nursing and lead study author. “Our findings offer some of the first evidence linking exposure to graphic images in media with responses to a real-world collective trauma in a nationally representative sample, and if corroborated, could inform decision-making in large mass media outlets.”

The team analyzed the results from more than 3,000 anonymous online surveys taken two to four weeks after the 2013 Boston Marathon Bombings and again six months later. Dana Rose Garfin, adjunct faculty, Sue & Bill Gross School of Nursing; Pauline Lubens, policy analyst at the Institute for Veteran Policy, Swords to Plowshares; and Roxane Cohen Silver, professor of psychological science, also participated in the study.

[Please click here to read the original article.]

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