Rice Emma S, Haynes Emma, Royce Paul, Thompson Sandra C
Georgetown University, 3700, O St NW, Washington, DC, 20057, USA.
Western Australian Centre for Rural Health (WACRH), University of Western Australia, 167 Fitzgerald St, Geraldton, WA, 6530, Australia.
Int J Equity Health. 2016 May 25;15:81. doi: 10.1186/s12939-016-0366-0.
The use of social media and digital technologies has grown rapidly in Australia and around the world, including among Indigenous young people who face social disadvantage. Given the potential to use social media for communication, providing information and as part of creating and responding to social change, this paper explores published literature to understand how Indigenous Australian youth use digital technologies and social media, and its positive and negative impacts.
Online literature searches were conducted in three databases: PubMed, Google Scholar and Informit in August 2014; with further searches of additional relevant databases (Engineering Village; Communication & mass media complete; Computers & applied sciences complete; Web of Science) undertaken in May 2015. In addition, relevant literature was gathered using citation snowballing so that additional peer-reviewed and grey literature was included. Articles were deemed relevant if they discussed social media and/or digital technologies and Indigenous Australians. After reading and reviewing all relevant articles, a thematic analysis was used to identify overall themes and identify specific examples.
A total of 22 papers were included in the review. Several major themes were identified about how and why Indigenous young people use social media: identity, power and control, cultural compatibility and community and family connections. Examples of marketing for health and health promotion approaches that utilize social media and digital technologies were identified. Negative uses of social media such as cyber bullying, cyber racism and the exchange of sexually explicit content between minors are common with limited approaches to dealing with this at the community level.
Strong cultural identity and community and family connections, which can be enhanced through social media, are linked to improved educational and health outcomes. The confidence that Indigenous young people demonstrate when approaching the use of social media invites its further use, including in arenas where this group may not usually participate, such as in research.
Future research could examine ways to minimise the misuse of social media while maximising its positive potential in the lives of Indigenous young people. Future research should also focus on the positive application of social media and showing evidence in health promotion interventions in order to reduce health inequities between Indigenous and non-Indigenous young people.
社交媒体和数字技术在澳大利亚及全球的使用迅速增长,包括在面临社会劣势的原住民年轻人中。鉴于社交媒体在沟通、提供信息以及作为创造和应对社会变革一部分的潜力,本文探讨已发表的文献,以了解澳大利亚原住民青年如何使用数字技术和社交媒体,以及其正面和负面影响。
2014年8月在三个数据库进行了在线文献搜索:PubMed、谷歌学术和Informit;2015年5月对其他相关数据库(工程村;通信与大众传媒全文数据库;计算机与应用科学全文数据库;科学引文索引)进行了进一步搜索。此外,通过引文滚雪球的方式收集相关文献,以便纳入更多同行评审文献和灰色文献。如果文章讨论了社交媒体和/或数字技术以及澳大利亚原住民,则被视为相关。在阅读和审查所有相关文章后,采用主题分析来确定总体主题并找出具体例子。
本综述共纳入22篇论文。确定了几个关于原住民年轻人如何以及为何使用社交媒体的主要主题:身份认同、权力与控制、文化兼容性以及社区和家庭联系。确定了利用社交媒体和数字技术进行健康营销及健康促进方法的例子。社交媒体的负面用途,如网络欺凌、网络种族主义以及未成年人之间传播露骨色情内容很常见,而社区层面处理这些问题的方法有限。
强大的文化身份以及社区和家庭联系可通过社交媒体得到加强,这与改善教育和健康结果相关。原住民年轻人在使用社交媒体时表现出的自信促使其进一步使用,包括在该群体通常不参与的领域,如研究领域。
未来的研究可以探讨如何在最大限度发挥社交媒体对原住民年轻人生活的积极潜力的同时,尽量减少其滥用。未来的研究还应侧重于社交媒体的积极应用,并在健康促进干预措施中提供证据,以减少原住民和非原住民年轻人之间的健康不平等。