
Recently, therapists have been talking about a specific type of patient. She has been in weekly therapy for years, is in her late thirties, and has a stable job. She enters, takes a seat, and ten minutes later is in tears over a child she has never met in a city she has never been to. Last night, the child was using her phone. As they listen, the therapist realizes that the child on the screen isn’t the real target of the tears. They are intended for a much older, closer, or more distant person.
Vicarious traumatization is the term used by clinicians to describe this. It’s not brand-new. The delivery system is novel, or at the very least, recently intense. Ten years ago, editors processed war footage before airing it on the evening news, bringing it into living rooms. These days, it usually arrives before breakfast, uncut, vertical, and autoplaying. A doctor in Gaza. A teen in Sudan. A drone attack in Ukraine was captured from the incorrect angle. Therapists are observing the effects in clients who have never been in a combat zone because the footage is intimate in a way that television has never been.
| Key Information | Details |
|---|---|
| Topic | Vicarious/secondary trauma from war media exposure |
| Primary population affected | Adults with histories of childhood trauma, abuse, neglect, or violent loss |
| Common triggering content | Graphic war footage, civilian casualty videos, social-media reels |
| Reported symptoms | Flashbacks, hypervigilance, emotional numbing, sleep disturbance, panic |
| Clinical framework | Reactivation of unprocessed childhood traumatic memory networks, often presenting as PTSD symptoms |
| Therapies most cited by clinicians | Trauma-focused CBT, Narrative Exposure Therapy (NET), EMDR, cognitive reappraisal |
| Suggested daily media exposure (clinician guidance) | Generally under 30 minutes per day for sensitized clients |
| Public health frameworks | Trauma-informed care, psychological first aid, and limiting graphic media |
| Documented across | U.S., U.K., Israel, Poland, Czech Republic, Taiwan, and Ukraine populations |
| Publication context | 2024–2026 clinical case observations and survey-based studies |
Some practitioners find it surprising who breaks down first. It’s not always the geopolitically interested or news-loving. Adults who were raised in homes with violence, addiction, absentee caregivers, or unexpected death are the ones who are affected. They perceive the war footage as completely avoiding the analytical mind. The body seems to sense things before the mind does. In the video, a voice is raised. A child weeping for a parent. the unique silence that follows an explosion. When a child is five, seven, or ten years old, their neural pathways light up like wiring in an old house.
This was referred to as media-transmitted secondary traumatization in a 2025 review published in the Journal of Traumatic Stress. The authors presented a compelling case: indirect media exposure can result in symptoms that are similar to, and occasionally more severe than, some types of direct exposure. This discovery subtly challenges the previous diagnostic presumption that you had to be present. Apparently, you don’t. Your phone is important. The video is important. The total adds up.
Each patient has a unique way of describing it. One claims that whenever she sees a specific Telegram thumbnail, her chest tightens. Another stopped using Instagram completely for three weeks, but she discovered that the avoidance itself caused an odd, restless guilt. She realized that this was the same guilt she had experienced as a child when she stopped watching her parents fight. numbing, hypervigilance, and then hypervigilance again. It’s possible that what’s occurring is more the reactivation of trauma that was, to be honest, never completely resolved in the first place than the creation of new trauma.
In response, therapists are using relatively low-tech methods. Restrict your intake. Not before bed, but for a total of thirty minutes. Take note of the body as well as the headlines. Develop a small, consistent sense of current safety, taking into account your location, the people you are with, and the actual contents of the space. Although the interventions seem almost embarrassingly straightforward, practitioners claim that they are effective in part because they give someone who lacked agency as a child a sense of it again. The literature frequently refers to cognitive reappraisal—the gradual process of reinterpreting an image’s meaning and what it actually requires of you—as protective. When processing older wounds in addition to the more recent activation, narrative exposure therapy and trauma-focused cognitive behavioral therapy do more work.
As this develops, it’s difficult to ignore the fact that the relationship between personal stability and distant suffering has changed. By most accounts, public concern over the conflicts in Sudan, Gaza, and Ukraine is a moral good. However, the architecture that addresses that issue—autoplay, infinite scroll, and engagement-optimized algorithms—was never created with traumatized nervous systems in mind. It appears that therapists, who hold this in their offices daily, are becoming more conscious of the fact that part of their work now entails teaching clients how to be informed citizens without becoming overwhelmed by it. It’s still unclear if the larger culture will catch up. In any event, the wars have not waited.

