A critical analysis of UK media characterisations of long covid in children and young people
A critical analysis of UK media characterisations of long covid in children and young people
Long Covid is the continuation or development of symptoms related to a SARSCoV2 infection. Those with Long Covid may face epistemic injustice, where they are unjustifiably viewed as unreliable evaluators of their own illness experiences. Media articles both reflect and influence perception and subsequently how people regard children and young people (CYP) with Long Covid, and may contribute to epistemic injustice.? We aimed to explore how the UK media characterises Long Covid in CYP through examining three key actor groups: parents, healthcare professionals, and CYP with Long Covid, through the lens of epistemic injustice. A systematic search strategy resulted in the inclusion of 103 UK media articles. We used an adapted corpus-assisted Critical Discourse Analysis in tandem with thematic analysis. Specifically, we utilised search terms to locate concordances of key actor groups. In the corpus, parents highlighted minimisation of Long Covid, barriers to care, and experiences of personal attacks. Mothers were presented as also having Long Covid. Fathers were not mentioned once. Healthcare professionals emphasised the rarity of Long Covid in CYP, avoided pathologizing Long Covid, and overemphasised psychological components. CYP rarely were consulted in media articles but were presented as formerly very able. Manifestations of Long Covid in CYP were validated or invalidated in relation to adults. Media characterisations contributed to epistemic injustice. The disempowering portrayal of parents promote stigma and barriers to care. Healthcare professionals' narratives often contributed to negative healthcare experiences and enacted testimonial injustice, where CYP and parent’s credibility was diminished due to unfair identity prejudice, in their invalidation of Long Covid. Media characterisations reveal and maintain a lack of societal framework for understanding Long Covid in CYP. The findings of this study illustrate the discursive practices employed by journalists that contribute to experiences of epistemic injustice. Based on our findings, we propose recommendations for journalists.
Connor, Chloe
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Kranert, Michael
2054176a-2b70-491b-9ee7-5388ae25296f
Mckelvie, Sara
61c92fa0-fa9f-4d59-988d-6e669d8f8f32
Clutterbuck, Donna
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Mcfarland, Sammie
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Alwan, Nisreen A
0d37b320-f325-4ed3-ba51-0fe2866d5382
15 April 2024
Connor, Chloe
3b632888-358d-4b89-b595-cfb8aa10f689
Kranert, Michael
2054176a-2b70-491b-9ee7-5388ae25296f
Mckelvie, Sara
61c92fa0-fa9f-4d59-988d-6e669d8f8f32
Clutterbuck, Donna
b5afd11c-fbc3-422c-8c88-296146d9db02
Mcfarland, Sammie
6310f14d-97cf-40ca-849c-adecf492a0b6
Alwan, Nisreen A
0d37b320-f325-4ed3-ba51-0fe2866d5382
[Unknown type: UNSPECIFIED]
Abstract
Long Covid is the continuation or development of symptoms related to a SARSCoV2 infection. Those with Long Covid may face epistemic injustice, where they are unjustifiably viewed as unreliable evaluators of their own illness experiences. Media articles both reflect and influence perception and subsequently how people regard children and young people (CYP) with Long Covid, and may contribute to epistemic injustice.? We aimed to explore how the UK media characterises Long Covid in CYP through examining three key actor groups: parents, healthcare professionals, and CYP with Long Covid, through the lens of epistemic injustice. A systematic search strategy resulted in the inclusion of 103 UK media articles. We used an adapted corpus-assisted Critical Discourse Analysis in tandem with thematic analysis. Specifically, we utilised search terms to locate concordances of key actor groups. In the corpus, parents highlighted minimisation of Long Covid, barriers to care, and experiences of personal attacks. Mothers were presented as also having Long Covid. Fathers were not mentioned once. Healthcare professionals emphasised the rarity of Long Covid in CYP, avoided pathologizing Long Covid, and overemphasised psychological components. CYP rarely were consulted in media articles but were presented as formerly very able. Manifestations of Long Covid in CYP were validated or invalidated in relation to adults. Media characterisations contributed to epistemic injustice. The disempowering portrayal of parents promote stigma and barriers to care. Healthcare professionals' narratives often contributed to negative healthcare experiences and enacted testimonial injustice, where CYP and parent’s credibility was diminished due to unfair identity prejudice, in their invalidation of Long Covid. Media characterisations reveal and maintain a lack of societal framework for understanding Long Covid in CYP. The findings of this study illustrate the discursive practices employed by journalists that contribute to experiences of epistemic injustice. Based on our findings, we propose recommendations for journalists.
Text
2024.04.13.24305152v1.full
- Author's Original
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Published date: 15 April 2024
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Local EPrints ID: 489236
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/489236
PURE UUID: d3d95c67-24dd-4296-ad19-87b2e4de107f
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Date deposited: 18 Apr 2024 16:39
Last modified: 19 Apr 2024 02:01
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Author:
Chloe Connor
Author:
Donna Clutterbuck
Author:
Sammie Mcfarland
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