Brooks Matthew, Glynn Jessica, Fawcett Hannah, Barnes Aminah, Carew Rachael, Errickson David, Livanou Maria
School of Psychology, Manchester Metropolitan University, Manchester, UK.
School of Life Sciences, Coventry University, Coventry, UK.
Br J Clin Psychol. 2025 Sep;64(3):603-622. doi: 10.1111/bjc.12522. Epub 2024 Dec 23.
Prior research indicates that jury duty can be distressing for some jurors. This study examined: (1) the influence of prior trauma characteristics (type, exposure, time since trauma), medical fear and mental health difficulties on stress and emotional responses during a mock trial and 1 week later; and (2) associations between early stress reactions during a trial on subsequent stress and emotional reactivity after exposure to skeletal evidence and 1 week later.
Mock jurors (n = 180) completed baseline self-report mental health measures, read a summary of a murder case and were then exposed to graphic skeletal evidence. Stress and/or emotional responses were collected at baseline, after reading the case summary, before and after viewing the skeletal evidence and 7 days post-trial.
Participants reported a wide range of prior traumatic experiences, with nearly half reporting pre-existing mental health difficulties. Average traumatic stress symptoms tripled from baseline to follow-up, with 44% of participants meeting PTSD-type criteria 7 days later. Medical fear and mental health difficulties were positively associated with some stress and/or emotional responses throughout the trial, with mixed findings concerning trauma characteristics, stress and emotional reactivity. Initial stress and emotional responses to case evidence were linked to later stress and emotional reactions, after accounting for pre-existing trauma and mental health characteristics.
Past trauma experiences, mental health difficulties and immediate stress responses during a trial can exacerbate emotional and stress reactions. Addressing the psychological impacts of pre-existing trauma symptoms could improve juror well-being during this important civic duty.
先前的研究表明,陪审团职责对一些陪审员来说可能会造成困扰。本研究调查了:(1)先前创伤特征(类型、暴露情况、创伤发生后的时间)、医疗恐惧和心理健康问题对模拟审判期间及1周后的压力和情绪反应的影响;(2)审判期间的早期应激反应与接触骨骼证据后及1周后的后续压力和情绪反应性之间的关联。
模拟陪审员(n = 180)完成了基线自我报告心理健康测量,阅读了一起谋杀案的摘要,然后接触了生动的骨骼证据。在基线、阅读案件摘要后、查看骨骼证据前后以及审判后7天收集压力和/或情绪反应。
参与者报告了广泛的先前创伤经历,近一半的人报告存在心理健康问题。从基线到随访,平均创伤应激症状增加了两倍,44%的参与者在7天后符合创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)类型标准。在整个审判过程中,医疗恐惧和心理健康问题与一些压力和/或情绪反应呈正相关,关于创伤特征、压力和情绪反应性的结果不一。在考虑了先前存在的创伤和心理健康特征后,对案件证据的初始压力和情绪反应与后期的压力和情绪反应有关。
过去的创伤经历、心理健康问题以及审判期间的即时应激反应会加剧情绪和压力反应。解决先前存在的创伤症状的心理影响可能会改善陪审员在履行这一重要公民职责期间的幸福感。