Current:Home > ScamsBurley Garcia|I can't help but follow graphic images from Israel-Hamas war. I should know better. -Elevate Profit Vision
Burley Garcia|I can't help but follow graphic images from Israel-Hamas war. I should know better.
Surpassing Quant Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-08 19:42:04
Like many,Burley Garcia I’ve recently been using social media to follow the war in the Middle East. As a habit, following news like this makes a certain amount of sense – social media has often been one of the better sources for breaking information on emerging crises.
Many aspects of this war are unique, but what is increasingly common is that my social media feeds, along with those of many others, are populated with extremely graphic images, many of which, having seen them, I fervently wished I could unsee. Yet I still felt compelled to follow the news, to seek out ever-more visceral videos and details of this unfolding human tragedy.
I am far from alone in my exposure to this extreme content. And while it may seem like being an active, informed citizen requires such immersion in raw imagery, I am also a social psychologist and should know better.
Immersive sensory experiences tied to secondary trauma
The effects of a traumatic event – and the events in Israel and Gaza are certainly that – are, as we psychologists well know, contagious. That is, their effects can spread well beyond their initial victims. In war, those victims include those who are displaced, injured and killed, as well as those who have lost a loved one.
The idea of secondary trauma recognizes that people indirectly exposed to an event like war can suffer as well.
Take, for example, drone operators, who endlessly scan live footage and take split second orders to fire rockets at suspected terrorists, then commute home in time for dinner. Even though they are not physically exposed to harm, these immersive sensory experiences become associated with real trauma.
Gaza humanitarian crisis:Israel-Hamas war will leave a generation in trauma. Will the world forget its children?
That jarring disconnect, especially because it often goes unacknowledged, becomes its own form of trauma for people in critical roles such as emergency rescuers, social media content moderators, law enforcement and intelligence analysts.
Secondary trauma was, for a long time, largely confined to people involved in the initial event, like first responders. Thanks to technology, however, it can now afflict anyone with a smartphone.
And now, as graphic images from Israel and Gaza proliferate on social media, it is likely that these images are having significant negative impacts on the mental health and well-being of many – especially adolescents and young adults, who already struggle mightily.
And social media choices help spread secondary trauma
The proliferation of traumatizing social media content is, make no mistake, a deliberate choice. People post war dispatches for many reasons, such as to expose atrocities, but also to deceive and to serve as propaganda. Hamas attackers have hijacked victims’ social media accounts to sow even more terror.
For their part, social media platforms have actively encouraged the spread of misinformation – this after layoffs shed their ability to weed it out.
Social media algorithms also drive people to extreme content, even when they're not actively looking for it.
The global mental health impacts of this war are only just beginning. But, like its casualties, they will likely be staggering. Social media companies could and should do more to moderate the virality of such content, but they have largely abdicated this responsibility.
Many have withdrawn from the business of providing news – that is, accurate and relevant information – leaving behind a toxic stew of false and misleading posts. Communities might need to seek out less toxic alternatives to the digital town square.
That mental health and health behaviors are contagious is both good and bad news. Parents should look to improve their own social media habits and model a healthy digital lifestyle for their kids. Digital health companies could also shift their focus from individual to public health.
Overwhelmed by the Israel-Hamas war?Here's how to protect your mental health.
Young people are in many ways their own best hope. Today’s youth are active and enthusiastic about shaping the world they will grow up in. Policymakers would do well to prioritize younger voices, concerns and ideas when thinking through proposals toward building a less traumatizing form of social media.
Trauma is often described as a shattering of one’s assumptions or worldviews. That is, when events collide with our expectations, beliefs or hopes, we are forced to reconsider what is truly possible.
This latest war – set in a world still emerging from the COVID-19 pandemic, grappling with social isolation and mental health crises – has provided plenty of traumatizing developments, with the grim promise of more to come. Mitigating their impact on global mental health might require some combination of regulations, “healthy” social networks or personal behavior change.
It certainly requires making hard choices and doing the work to forge community bonds that prioritize everyone’s well-being. And much of that work starts with knowing the spillover effects of trauma, and how it affects us all.
Douglas Yeung is a senior behavioral scientist at RAND Corporation and a member of the Pardee RAND Graduate School faculty.
veryGood! (3)
Related
- 'Survivor' 47 finale, part one recap: 2 players were sent home. Who's left in the game?
- Princess Kate turns heads in Jenny Packham dress amid return for Trooping the Colour event
- CLIMATE GLIMPSE: Scorching Northern Hemisphere heat leads to deaths and wildfires
- Dr. Anthony Fauci on pandemics, partisan critics, and the psyche of the country
- NHL in ASL returns, delivering American Sign Language analysis for Deaf community at Winter Classic
- AI experimentation is high risk, high reward for low-profile political campaigns
- Upcoming June 2024 full moon will look unusually big and colorful
- Gordon Ramsay 'shook' after 'really bad' bike accident: 'Lucky to be here'
- Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
- Scooter Braun says he’s no longer a music manager, will focus on Hybe duties and his children
Ranking
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- Ryan Blaney wins inaugural Iowa Corn 350 to end victory drought
- Spoilers: Why that 'House of the Dragon' murder went too far
- AI experimentation is high risk, high reward for low-profile political campaigns
- 'We're reborn!' Gazans express joy at returning home to north
- Wildfire near Los Angeles burns over 14K acres, forcing evacuations
- Justin Timberlake Celebrates Father's Day With Rare Photos of His and Jessica Biel's Sons
- Comforting the condemned: Inside the execution chamber with reverend focused on humanity
Recommendation
The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
AI experimentation is high risk, high reward for low-profile political campaigns
Outraged Brazilian women stage protests against bill to equate late abortions with homicide
Maryland Gov. Wes Moore set to issue 175,000 pardons for marijuana convictions
The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
Eight Israeli soldiers killed in southern Gaza, IDF says
'We want to bully teams': How Philadelphia Phillies became the National League's best
Gordon Ramsay 'shook' after 'really bad' bike accident: 'Lucky to be here'