Factors that diminish or exacerbate traumatic stress in practicing journalists

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Authors

Ohlenkamp, Corey

Advisor

Seely, Natalee K.

Issue Date

2020-12-19

Keyword

Degree

Thesis (M.A.)

Department

Department of Journalism

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Abstract

Journalists are on the frontline for reporting on their communities, serving as both first responders and eyewitnesses to violent news events. These events can have a lasting effect on the reporter long after their stories are filed, and they have returned to their newsrooms. Reporting on traumatic events can have a wide range of mental health effects on reporters that newsrooms have not been able to adequately address due to a multitude of reasons. This qualitative study used a series of in-depth interviews with fourteen journalists across the country (n = 14) to increase the narrative around journalists’ relationship with trauma and identify what resources they feel would help address the problem of traumatic stress.

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