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Journal Article

Citation

Feinstein A, Pavisian B, Storm H. JRSM open 2018; 9(3): e2054270418759010.

Affiliation

Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, Toronto, ON M4N 3M5, Canada.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Royal Society of Medicine, Publisher SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/2054270418759010

PMID

29552347

PMCID

PMC5846940

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To explore the emotional health of journalists covering the migrations of refugees across Europe.

DESIGN: Descriptive. A secure website was established and participants were given their unique identifying number and password to access the site. SETTING: Newsrooms and in the field. PARTICIPANTS: Responses were received from 80 (70.2%) of 114 journalists from nine news organisations. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Symptoms of PTSD (Impact of Events Scale-revised), depression (Beck Depression Inventory-Revised) and moral injury (Moral Injury Events Scale-revised).

RESULTS: Symptoms of PTSD were not prominent, but those pertaining to moral injury and guilt were. Moral injury was associated with being a parent (p = .031), working alone (p = .02), a recent increase in workload (p = .017), a belief that organisational support is lacking (p = .046) and poor control over resources needed to report the story (p = .027). A significant association was found between guilt and moral injury (p = .01) with guilt more likely to occur in journalists who reported covering the migrant story close to home (p = .011) and who divulged stepping outside their role as a journalist to assist migrants (p = .014). Effect sizes (d) ranged from.47 to.71.

CONCLUSIONS: On one level, the relatively low scores on conventional psychometric measures of PTSD and depression are reassuring. However, our data confirm that moral injury is a different construct from DSM-defined trauma response syndromes, one that potentially comes with its own set of long-term maladaptive behaviours and adjustment problems.


Language: en

Keywords

Other psychiatry; anxiety disorders (including OCD and PTSD)

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