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Thursday, November 8, 2012

Media Coverage of Natural Disasters Can Impact Kids’ Trauma Symptoms



Media Coverage of Natural Disasters May Influence PTSD in Children
Incessant media coverage during the course of a natural disaster has led some parents to fear that young children may become overexposed to distress and carnage. For adults, the stories are often so compelling that we relish the opportunity to be on ground zero to witness and literally feel the effects of the disaster, first hand. But this version of reality television may be problematic to children who often have schedules that allow them to stay glued to the TV for hours on end. Still, new research suggests the relationship between this kind of exposure and symptoms of traumatic stress in youths is complex.


A new study, published in the journal Psychological Science, finds that while the amount of exposure to disaster coverage matters, children’s preexisting symptoms of posttraumatic stress also play an important role. As part of an ongoing study, Carl Weems, Ph.D., and his colleagues at the University of New Orleans followed 141 fourth through eighth graders, all of whom attended a single school in a New Orleans neighborhood that had experienced massive damage and flooding following Hurricane Katrina in August of 2005.

The children were evaluated for PTSD symptoms 24 and 30 months after Katrina. The researchers also evaluated the children’s PTSD symptoms and amount of disaster-related TV viewing one month after Hurricane Gustav, which made landfall on August 31, 2008. To assess perceptions of self-harm, the researchers asked the children whether they thought they would get hurt during Hurricane Gustav. To measure their overall distress, they asked the children how scared they were during the hurricane. The data were collected as part of the school’s counseling curriculum, and the children completed all of the measures in a group classroom setting with the assistance of trained staff.

About 25 percent of the children said they had watched “a lot” of disaster coverage on TV, while 31 percent said they had watched “a whole lot.” The amount of Gustav-related coverage that the children watched was associated with their PTSD symptoms post-Gustav. Subsequent analyses revealed that pre-Gusatv symptoms, perceptions of self-harm, and viewing of disaster-related coverage were all predictors of symptoms of PTSD following Hurricane Gustav. But, as the researchers predicted, the relationship between TV viewing and post-Gustav symptoms depended on children’s pre-Gustav symptoms. The relationship between TV viewing and post-Gustav symptoms of PTSD was significant only for children who had high levels of pre-Gustav symptoms.

The study is one of the first to use a prospective design to examine the relationship between TV viewing and children’s stress reactions after disasters. This format allowed the researchers to investigate possible factors that might contribute to children’s symptoms both before and after a natural disaster. Based on their findings, Weems and his colleagues believe that preexisting symptoms could be an important tool for identifying which children are most likely to be negatively affected by watching disaster-related coverage. In other words, parents may wish to limit media exposure for children with anxiety disorders or other forms of PTSD during media coverage of stressful events.

Source: Psych Central 

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