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Graphic, Violent
Images
Can Curb Kids' Aggression
Showing children realistic and graphic images of the consequences
of violence appears to quell some of their aggressive tendencies,
new research reports.
After seeing pictures of people
treated for gunshot wounds, including a man whose stomach was
ripped apart by a bullet and a woman who lost her 8-month old
fetus when she was shot in the abdomen, children and teens demonstrated
an improvement in their attitudes toward conflict and aggression.
After looking at those pictures,
participants showed signs that they would be "less likely to solve
interpersonal conflict in a violent way," study author Dr. Edward
E. Cornwell, III stated.
Cornwell argued that some of the
current problems of violence among teens and children may stem
from the fact that they are often surrounded by media that "minimize
the consequences of violence."
For instance, Cornwell described
a recent rap video that includes a scene in which a singer is
shot, but is followed by another scene in which he appears unscathed
by the experience.
In response, the researcher said
that he and his colleagues are currently putting together a public
service announcement that holds the images of violence included
in rap videos up to actual photos of trauma victims. "This is
reality," said Cornwell, chief of adult trauma at Johns Hopkins
Hospital in Baltimore.
In the study, Cornwell and his
team asked 97 boys and girls between the ages of 7 and 17 about
their attitudes toward conflict and aggression. The researchers
then showed the teens and children pictures of people who had
been shot, and resurveyed 48 participants an average of 30 days
later to see if their attitudes had changed.
All children and teens were participating
in programs held at Police Athletic League (PAL) centers. PAL
is a program designed to deter youth crime and violence.
The researchers saw a general improvement
in attitudes toward conflict and aggression, and noted a particularly
significant decrease in aggressive tendencies among the female
participants.
In an interview, Cornwell noted
that it is important to look at girls' attitudes toward violence,
since many children and teens are raised by single mothers, and
therefore likely get some of their attitudes about aggression
from women.
Cornwell conceded that the children
and teens in the study may not represent all youths. The fact
that they were enrolled in PAL programs suggests they were motivated
to get off of the streets.
He added that the best time to
show kids the effects of violence may be early, before they have
had a chance to experiment with drugs and crime. Waiting until
it's too late can be equivalent to "offering swimming lessons
from the bottom of the pool," he said.
The researchers presented their
findings this month during the annual conference of the American
Trauma Society in Arlington, Virginia.
Reference
Source 89
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