Download dit artikel in het Themanummer Rampen en Calamiteiten van Psychologie & Gezondheid 2008 36/3
Media and disasters
Disasters have always been breaking news, but
in the current competitive media landscape the media have an interest in
expanding the disaster into a news spectacle, spanning several weeks
afterwards. After the immediate on the spot reporting, the media will
concentrate on two major stories: human interest and the question of guilt and
political responsibilities. The focus on the personal and emotional stories is
the result of a major shift of perspective in journalism in which the
experiences of the citizens have become equally important as the view of the
official sources. The ‘blaming’ news flow can be linked to changes in the
perception on risk and disaster, for which the government is held responsible
at any time. The interaction between media, public and government in the
aftermath of the disaster may create a process in which a specific risk,
connected to the disaster, is amplified over and over again. This forces the
government to take drastic action that may not be in proportion with the actual
risk. Exposure to all these post-impact news waves sometimes contributes to
stress-related health problems among survivors and rescue workers.