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CRY FOR HELP: Sarah Johnson
screams "My patient is not dead, my patient is not dying;
all she needs is oxygen" as she seeks help at the Convention
Center in New Orleans during aftermath of Hurricane Katrina
in September 2005. Images such as this one can contribute to
a low level of stress and anxiety because of such news media
exposure. (MELISSA PHILLIP -- Houston Chronicle)
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LIKE IT OR NOT, those iconic
images of the catastrophic 9/11 terrorist attacks are back in
our living rooms and national consciousness again, a troubling
replay of the collapsing towers, dazed survivors, frantic
rescuers and smoke-engulfed, debris-crusted streets of a great
city.
Five years later, the immediate
shock, terror and disbelief are gone, but the anxiety that 9/11
and other disasters reported in the news media generates in
people, even people not directly affected by them, has not gone
away.
In fact, as one researcher is
finding, many of us these days are experiencing a constant, low
level of stress and anxiety because of news media exposure.
Part of it, too, is the stress
churned up by technological advances and the ubiquitous and
intrusive electronic gadgets that dominate our daily lives.
Peaceful quiet is in short supply.
"What I'm arguing is that as
part of this sensory overload, we hear about every disaster
everywhere in the world, constantly, over and over," says Mary
McNaughton-Cassill, an associate professor of psychology at the
University of Texas at San Antonio who studies stress and stress
management. "In the past, you heard about disasters, but that
was usually buffered by time and distance.
"It wasn't live, and there
wasn't nearly the volume of it. But CNN and 24-hour cable news
changed that."
Here it's useful to make the
distinction between fear — worry about a real and immediate
threat — and anxiety — concern about a possible threat. Looking
at it in the human evolutionary context, people reacted to
negative and scary events that they experienced unfiltered. Now,
the bad news can be remote yet disturbing in the sense of could
this — terrorism, a deadly storm, random violence — happen in my
city and country, could this happen to me?
In her research,
McNaughton-Cassill found that individuals who looked back at
tragic events such as the death of Princess Diana and ruminated
on all the "if onlys" — if only she hadn't gotten into that car
— had a harder time getting over it.
And media reports about 9/11,
Katrina and plane crashes provide a mountain of "if onlys." It's
not that people become clinically depressed and need medication
and therapy. They may not even be aware that they're affected.
But what she calls their "malaise" level climbs, a combination
of worry, depressed mood and lack of trust in the people in
charge.
All of this matters because
study after study of the mind-body connection is showing that
chronic levels of stress are implicated in a number of
psychiatric and physical ills, from mood disorders to heart
disease.
McNaughton-Cassill thinks the
stress-generating media reports go back to the Vietnam War,
which brought terrifying images of napalm bombing into American
homes. But a seemingly endless and insistent stream followed,
including in recent years, frightening events such as the
Oklahoma City bombing, the series of school shootings, genocide
in Bosnia and Africa, the terrorist attacks and anthrax threats,
the sniper shootings in Washington, and the destruction and
failures of Katrina.
Add to that Iraq, Lebanon and
rumblings about nukes in Iran.
"Research shows that even if
you didn't know anyone at Oklahoma City or in 9/11, if you
watched (reports) a lot, you could have minor
signs of post-traumatic stress
like disturbed sleep, changes in appetite and recurrent
thoughts," McNaughton-Cassill says.
Of course, there's another side
to this. Victor Cline, a clinical psychologist in Salt Lake City
who has looked at the effects of violence in the media, says
that while some people are stressed out by 9/11 and similarly
horrific images, others have been desensitized by terrorists
threats and overexposure to man-made and natural destruction.
"Some people have seen so much
on TV that they don't even believe it anymore, like in England
where terrorists were planning to blow up 10 or 12 airliners.
That's a reverse problem."
Likewise, some turn away from
painful images of starving children in Africa or broken bodies
after a Baghdad bombing. "We should be (psychologically) healthy
enough that we can experience some inner sorrow and distress
when we see people mutilated or injured or tortured or
attacked," Cline adds. "But after a while people get numb. It
(repeated exposure) blunts conscience."
There is a kind of disconnect
as some viewers take in images of suffering children and
bombings on evening newscasts and then go out to dinner at a
favorite restaurant. But unsettling as it is upon reflection,
that disconnect is a coping tool in an anxious world, says
McNaughton-Cassill. "I argue that if you couldn't get up and go
to dinner, you'd be paralyzed. You couldn't function."
The researcher emphasizes her
work is not aimed at blaming the media for our anxiety, but
rather at understanding the powerful psychological impact of
this exposure, the internalized anxiety it creates and ways to
cope with it.
Each person is affected
differently and reacts differently. Some want to stay informed
but know when to turn off the TV and move past the scary
headlines.
Others are addicted to 24-hour
news. In the middle are those who watch and read moderate
amounts and get anxious.
"I'm arguing for a lot more
discussion on this and a lot more thoughtfulness on how people
want to manage it in their lives," McNaughton-Cassill says.
Contributing to stress are the
inescapable computers, cell phones, iPods, instant e-mail
messaging and other electronic devices that command our waking
hours.
When McNaughton-Cassill asked
students in her stress-management class to log the "alone" time
in their day — alone time with their thoughts and no electronic
intrusion — they recorded less than one hour. Quiet, thoughtful
time is a vital coping mechanism for stress.
Her coping mechanism? "I don't
watch TV news. I listen to the radio, NPR, and read the
(newspaper) and news magazines. It's the TV news visuals that
get to me, and by the time you realize you don't want to see
something, it's too late." |