Once again, the news agenda is dominated by tragedies. A Greek ferry is stranded by fire in the Mediterranean, and an airliner is lost over the Java Sea.
Both of these disasters are ongoing, so it would not be appropriate to comment on the progress of rescue operations at this time as hundreds of families are having to come to terms with the prospect of losing loved ones.
But as a psychologist, I am particularly drawn to the experience of the relatives, in how we observe them and in how the media concentrates on their grief and anxiety. It is important that we have a free press, reporting on important events, informing the public, holding the powerful and rich to account, exploring and investigating culpable negligence.
And it is understandable and inevitable that 24-hour news organizations will focus on the very human emotions of the relatives. As viewers, we too are culpable as we watch distressed people try to respond to the unfolding tragedies. But it does worry me.
The first things the families need now is information—they need information more than anything else. Authorities need to tell them as much as they know, as clearly as they can. The media can help here—not by focusing on the families’ experiences, but in giving them information.
The second thing families need is to have a sense of community and shared support for each other. When people go through shared tragedies, those tragedies are somewhat easier to bear if you’re part of a community. At this stage, I wouldn’t try to offer them therapy or counseling, I'd try to offer them facts and try to build a sense of community. We should not try to second-guess people’s psychological reactions. As a psychologist I wouldn’t try to interpret those reactions. Whatever is happening should be considered normal.
Nothing to See
What can the media do? They shouldn’t use grief as spectator sport. I know it’s very attractive, but the media should leave alone those members of the public caught up in such events. Please don’t think the media can do something helpful for these people. Don’t take photos when somebody is doing something slightly unusual like rocking or praying or getting angry; that’s what people do. They’re not odd, they’re not strange and they’re not particularly interesting. Don’t judge them—leave them alone. All shades of human emotional response are normal and natural.
A few months ago, several news organizations shared a paparazzo photo of a well-known celebrity caught at the precise moment he was informed of his child’s death. An obviously arresting image—a picture of raw humanity. And therefore hugely attractive for media organizations. Grief and raw emotion are obviously engaging.
But … the media also has ethical standards. And I think it is important for it to accept that anxious and grieving relatives need privacy and time. Grief should not be a spectator sport.
Peter Kinderman is a professor of clinical psychology at the University of Liverpool in the U.K. This article previously published on TheConversation.com.