Three trauma takes that the media gets wrong
The media often reflects personal and professional biases and community misunderstandings about trauma.
The media often reflects personal and professional biases and community misunderstandings about trauma.
Originating in the medical sciences, where it referred to physical injury, the term 鈥渢rauma鈥 is now often used in popular and scholarly discussion to refer to psychological injury. While consistently find sexual assault is a major risk factor for traumatic illness, it鈥檚 often assumed pre-existing mental illness is the cause of the allegation itself.
Arguments around the truthfulness of assault claims can hinge on stereotypical portrayals of people living with mental illness as untrustworthy witnesses to their own experience.
The recent sexual assault allegation against Attorney-General Christian Porter, which he has strenuously denied, has been accompanied by relating to memory and the mental health of Porter鈥檚 now deceased accuser. Some journalists have pointed to her mental health status in a manner designed to , and to suggest her allegation was a post-hoc confabulation.
The complainant鈥檚 bipolar diagnosis, her seeking mental health care, her fragmented journal entries, and her accessing a book on the neuroscience of trauma have been emphasised as evidence she invented her account or was suffering from .
This type of argument reflects longstanding myths that prevail within journalism and the community about trauma, memory and mental illness. Below, we tackle three key misunderstandings.
Apparent links in media commentary between a bipolar diagnosis and false allegations of sexual assault reflect a misunderstanding of the diagnosis.
People with experience significant fluctuations in mood, including low depressive states and active 鈥渕anic鈥 states. A have found childhood trauma increases the risk of developing bipolar disorders, and contributes to the severity and complexity of symptoms, including earlier age of onset, and increased suicidal ideation and substance abuse. One found they were significantly more likely to report sexual assault in childhood or adulthood than patients with a depressive illness. This evidence suggests sexual assault is a risk factor for developing bipolar, and people with a bipolar diagnosis may be more vulnerable to sexual assault.
Bipolar has been in research into the relationship between sexual assault and mental illness, and these findings underscore the need for further exploration.
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The psychiatrist Bessel van der Kolk authored a bestselling book, . This book was noted in the journal of Porter鈥檚 alleged victim. Media commentators have repeatedly reported it as .
Within the field of trauma studies, this book is not considered controversial and is not associated with 鈥渞epressed鈥 or 鈥渞ecovered鈥 memory theories or practices. Furthermore, 鈥渞ecovered memory therapy鈥 is a fallacy.
鈥淩ecovered memory therapy鈥 is a pejorative term invented in the early 1990s to describe trauma therapy. People who use the term claim a significant number of therapists use improper techniques designed to 鈥渞ecover鈥 forgotten or repressed memories of sexual abuse, which creates 鈥渇alse memories鈥 and false allegations. However, there is no therapy called 鈥渞ecovered memory therapy鈥, and the term has been described by trauma experts created by advocates of people accused of sexual offences.
In 2004, the Victorian health regulator initiated an inquiry into 鈥渞ecovered memory therapy鈥 (RMT) at the urging of 鈥渇alse memory鈥 activists. The inquiry concluded 鈥渞eports of the practice of RMT are often based on speculation鈥 and 鈥渢here is no reliable evidence for the practice of RMT鈥 in the state. The inquiry demonstrates how inflated claims of RMT have been advanced in Australia despite a lack of evidence.
, 鈥渂est practice鈥 trauma therapy has focused on establishing emotional and physical safety, processing and narrating experiences of trauma, and moving forward from abuse and violence.
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Some coverage has focused on specific details of the victim鈥檚 allegation with the implication that any discrepancy of detail invalidates the claims.
Details matter in establishing the legitimacy of claims. But demands a rethink of public and legal understanding of memory. According to , memory is commonly perceived as 鈥渁kin to a video recorder鈥. But, they argue, memory is fundamentally 鈥渋mperfect and is susceptible to distortion and loss鈥. They conclude 鈥渢here needs to be greater education and awareness of memory processes in judicial settings and in daily life鈥.
Dori Laub, eminent Israeli-American psychiatrist and Yale University Professor, recalled a woman describing her experience at Auschwitz for the Video Archive for Holocaust Testimonies at Yale in his . The woman said four chimneys exploded and went up in flames during the Auschwitz uprising. When he presented this interview at a cross-disciplinary conference, historians pronounced her recollection incorrect; only one chimney had blown. Her memory was fallible, unreliable, and therefore inadmissible.
Laub, the psychoanalyst who interviewed the woman for the video, disagreed. He said: 鈥淭he woman was testifying not to the number of the chimneys blown up, but to something else, something more radical, more crucial: the reality of an unimaginable occurrence.鈥 Accuracy regarding the number, he maintained, 鈥渕attered less than the occurrence鈥 and therefore, the woman鈥檚 testimony stood as 鈥渉istorical truth鈥 despite her factual error.
The private journal entries of Porter鈥檚 alleged victim have been exhibited by some journalists as lacking coherence, and a reference to her initially overlooking the assault in the hope of marrying Porter . Many sexually assaulted people know their abuser. Being bonded to an assailant to any degree can increase the common traumatic shock symptoms of denial and minimisation.
Journalling is often less than coherent. It鈥檚 not intended to be read but to help process highly complex personal experiences. Many women .
Media coverage has been integral to driving social change and highlighting the plight of victims and survivors of sexual violence.
However, the media also harbours to developments in trauma science, reflecting personal and professional biases as well as common attitudes and misunderstandings in the community.
Commentary reinforcing existing stigmatisation of traumatic and mental health conditions negatively affects a significant proportion of the Australian population.
Journalists should consult professionals with trauma expertise and when reporting on sensitive issues such as the impact of trauma on memory, according to . Trauma and mental health are public health issues, and people with media platforms have a responsibility to get it right.
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, Adjunct Lecturer in Writing, and , Scientia Associate Professor of Criminology,
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