Well, personally, I agree with most here--it has been my experience that I *definitely* can get triggered by movies & tv programs, although less than I used to be it still does happen, or even conversations about movies, tv shows, or other sufficiently triggering material. However, I definitely don't think it causes PTSD. I won't comment on anyone's experience though, only the topic of this thread. I do agree that it minimizes the experiences of those of us who have experienced or witnessed experiencing real horror & terror in our real lives.
No matter how bad (or triggering) it is to watch someone on tv get raped, it doesn't even land in the same continent as actually being raped.
I don't like horror films at all, never have, but occasionally watch them because my partner does. No matter how scary, disturbing or suspenseful they are, it doesn't come remotely close to *really* being in terror of a very real threat of being killed & having all of those you love killed for years. I've never been driven nearly crazy through constant, long term terror by a movie, no matter how scary it was.
Having said that, I am very much in agreement with children not being exposed prematurely to inappropriate tv & films, I do believe that (repetitively & chronically) can be harmful for children. And I think some children are more sensitive than others, which is why as a parent you best know how much your child can handle & boundaries need to be set for their well being--some kids *would* be traumatized for a time as a result of watching something they don't have the ability to cope with.
My stepson disagrees, he watched inappropriate tv at an inappropriate age, in my opinion, & believes it was a positive thing & didn't do him any harm--he thinks all children should be allowed this, & it would be good for them.
Having said all that, I clearly recall an incident from when I was extremely young, and saw a show on Masterpiece Theatre on tv (I think it was called). Too young to know fantasy from reality (in fact, even much older, I recall thinking that they must pay actors a lot of money to be on tv & in movies because I thought they really died ROTFLMAO), this particular incident, for whatever reason, I believe they were playing Rapunzel & apparently I freaked, just screaming & crying. Well I can recall why--I remember what the witch or whatever she was looked to me--huge, tall, terrifying, with this long bloated tongue--she looked like a live corpse.
I am absolutely certain that if I saw the same show now the witch would be unrecognizable, not what is so deeply etched in my memory--along with the corresponding terror that I remember this many years later. It probably looked like a puppet. But that isn't what I saw.
I had watched the program before, with no problems. But did this cause PTSD, despite that level of terror, not knowing the difference between reality & fantasy & my young age ? No.
The only exception I can think of, is when I was a kid we knew of a mom who exposed her 2 year old to slasher films on a regular basis--THAT, at such an age, regularly recurring, could probably cause significant trauma to a child, maybe even PTSD (since at that age, a child would not understand it wasn't real & that wasn't real people who were dying over & over again & being brutally murdered). But, I would also consider that child abuse & neglect, which brings the question, would the child in that scenario have PTSD as a result of abuse, or exposure to media, or both.
Also, another scenario, & this could happen with an older child--snuff films were brought up--a child is exposed regularly to movies in which terrified people are murdered. They are *told* it's real, ie a snuff film, when in fact it is not. The child is left to watch helplessly as people are murdered in front of them. This would be no different for that child than an adult being abducted, unable to escape, & forced to watch as strangers were murdered on video tape that they genuinely believed were dying.
Again, this would be considered abuse & psychological torture rather than neglect, as in my first example, & that is a trauma that could cause PTSD. But the question is, then, was the media also a direct cause of the PTSD?
Lol I don't have the answers to this, but I think it is an interesting question.
99% of the time no... But possibly in certain extreme circumstances?
It is an interesting topic. :)