Following mass traumatic events, greater exposure to traditional media like television (TV) about the event is associated with higher burden of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). However, we know little about how social media exposure, combined with other media sources, shapes the population burden of PTSD following mass traumatic events. We built a microsimulation of 1,18,000 agents that was demographically comparable to the population of Parkland and Coral Springs, Florida that experienced the Stoneman Douglas High School shooting in 2018. We parametrized the model using data from prior traumatic events and built an internal social network structure to facilitate the estimation of community PTSD prevalence following exposure to TV and social media coverage of the shooting. Overall, PTSD prevalence in the community due to exposure to TV coverage of the shooting was 3.1%. Shifting the whole population's hours of TV watching to the lower half of the population distribution decreased PTSD prevalence to 1.3% while increasing TV watching to the upper half of the distribution increased the prevalence to 3.5%. Casual (i.e., viewing posts) social media use in addition to exposure to TV coverage increased PTSD prevalence to 3.4%; overall prevalence increased to 5.3% when agents shared videos related to the shooting on social media. This microsimulation shows that availability and exposure to media coverage of mass traumatic events, particularly as social media becomes more ubiquitous, has the potential to increase community PTSD prevalence following these events. Future research could fruitfully examine the mechanisms that might explain these associations and potential interventions that can mitigate the role of media in shaping the mental health of populations following traumatic events.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2021.674263 | DOI Listing |
Psychol Trauma
January 2025
Department of Psychology, Division of Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy, Saarland University.
Objective: The way we interpret information shapes our perception of reality. Predictive processing frameworks propose that the ability to update interpretations based on disconfirming information is key to recovery from potentially traumatic events (PTEs). However, direct evidence for this assumption is scarce and comes from studies using paradigms with low ecological validity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlzheimers Dement
December 2024
University of California, Davis School of Medicine, Sacramento, CA, USA.
Background: Previous research demonstrates that stress and trauma are associated with poor health and increased dementia risk, but this is mostly based on studies of non-Hispanic Whites. This descriptive analysis delineated the war-related adversity and trauma in participants of the Vietnamese Insights into Cognitive Aging Program (VIP) study, a new cohort of cognitive aging in Vietnamese individuals in Northern California.
Method: VIP is a longitudinal study of 548 Vietnamese Americans aged 65+ years living in Northern California who are seen annually at either research site for three years.
Alzheimers Dement
December 2024
Huashan Hospital, Fudan University, Shanghai, Shanghai, China.
Background: Physical frailty is characterized as functional degeneration across multiple systems, which has been proposed as a risk factor for various health outcomes. However, the correlation between physical frailty and brain health, including brain function, brain disorders, and brain structure, remains unclear.
Method: Here, 316905 participants from the UK Biobank were included in this prospective longitudinal study.
Alzheimers Dement
December 2024
Lab of Neuropsychology & Behavioral Neuroscience, School of Psychology, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki, Greece.
Background: Prior longitudinal studies have found that individuals born during World War II and the postwar period had lower incident dementia (Tom et al., 2020) than previous generations, a finding contradictory to research indicating early-life stressors as adverse events for late-life cognition. This study aimed to further explore this association and underlying factors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Approximately 30% of women worldwide experience intimate partner violence (IPV). Although as many as 92% report impacts to the head and/or strangulation that raise clinical suspicion of brain injury (BI), there are no evidence-based methods to document IPV-BI in this vulnerable population, no clinical practice guideline, and insufficient understanding about long-term risks including Alzheimer's Disease and Related Dementias (ADRD). Although traumatic brain injury (TBI) is an established ADRD risk factor, little is known about attributable risk of ADRD due to IPV in either military or civilian populations.
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