Center for the Study and Prevention of Suicide, University of Rochester, 300 Crittenden Avenue, Rochester, NY 14642, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 2009 Aug;69(3):469-74. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2009.05.029. Epub 2009 Jun 18.
Young lesbian, gay, and bisexual (young LGB) individuals report higher rates of suicide ideation and attempts from their late teens through early twenties. Their high rate of Internet use suggests that online social networks offer a novel opportunity to reach them. This study explores online social networks as a venue for prevention research targeting young LGB. An automated data collection program was used to map the social connections between LGB self-identified individuals between 16 and 24 years old participating in an online social network. We then completed a descriptive analysis of the structural characteristics known to affect diffusion within such networks. Finally, we conducted Monte Carlo simulations of peer-driven diffusion of a hypothetical preventive intervention within the observed network under varying starting conditions. We mapped a network of 100,014 young LGB. The mean age was 20.4 years. The mean nodal degree was 137.5, representing an exponential degree distribution ranging from 1 through 4309. Monte Carlo simulations revealed that a peer-driven preventive intervention ultimately reached final sample sizes of up to 18,409 individuals. The network's structure is consistent with other social networks in terms of the underlying degree distribution. Such networks are typically formed dynamically through a process of preferential attachment. This implies that some individuals could be more important to target to facilitate the diffusion of interventions. However, in terms of determining the success of an intervention targeting this population, our simulation results suggest that varying the number of peers that can be recruited is more important than increasing the number of randomly-selected starting individuals. This has implications for intervention design. Given the potential to access this previously isolated population, this novel approach represents a promising new frontier in suicide prevention and other research areas.
年轻的同性恋、双性恋和跨性别者(年轻的 LGB)个体在十几岁到二十出头时报告自杀意念和自杀企图的比率较高。他们高频率的互联网使用表明,在线社交网络为他们提供了一个新的接触机会。本研究探讨了在线社交网络作为针对年轻 LGB 的预防研究的场所。我们使用自动化的数据收集程序来绘制参与在线社交网络的 16 至 24 岁的 LGB 自我认同个体之间的社交关系图。然后,我们对影响网络内扩散的已知结构特征进行了描述性分析。最后,我们根据观察到的网络中的起始条件,对同伴驱动的假设性预防干预措施在网络中的扩散进行了蒙特卡罗模拟。我们绘制了一个由 100014 名年轻 LGB 组成的网络。平均年龄为 20.4 岁。平均节点度为 137.5,代表了一个从 1 到 4309 的指数度分布。蒙特卡罗模拟显示,同伴驱动的预防干预措施最终达到了多达 18409 名最终样本量。就潜在的度分布而言,该网络的结构与其他社交网络一致。此类网络通常通过优先连接过程动态形成。这意味着,为了促进干预措施的扩散,某些个体可能是更重要的目标。然而,就确定针对该人群的干预措施的成功而言,我们的模拟结果表明,改变可以招募的同伴数量比增加随机选择的起始个体数量更为重要。这对干预设计具有启示意义。考虑到接触这个以前孤立的群体的潜力,这种新方法代表了预防自杀和其他研究领域的一个有前途的新前沿。