Cash Scottye, Schwab-Reese Laura Marie, Zipfel Erin, Wilt Megan, Moreno Megan
College of Social Work, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, United States.
Department of Health & Kinesiology, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, United States.
JMIR Form Res. 2020 Jul 17;4(7):e13650. doi: 10.2196/13650.
College students frequently use social media sites to connect with friends. Increasingly, research suggests college students and other young adults seek mental health-related support on social media, which may present a unique venue for intervention.
The purpose of this study was to examine college students' perceptions about displaying feelings of depression on Facebook and, in turn, how their social media friends responded.
A primarily quantitative online survey with open response questions was distributed to students at four US universities. Qualitative responses were analyzed using content analysis.
A total of 34 students provided qualitative responses for analysis, these students were 85.3% female, mean age 20.2 (SD=1.4) and 20.6% racial/ethnic minority. Students who reported posting about depression often expressed an emotion or feeling but did not use the word "depression" in the post. Approximately 20% posted language about a bad day, and 15% posted a song or music video. Only one person reported posting a statement that directly asked for help. When friends responded to the posts, students generally perceived the responses as supportive or motivating gestures. Nearly 15% of friends contacted the individual outside of Facebook. One individual received a negative response and no responses suggested that the individual seek help.
This study found that college students who post about depression often do so without directly referencing depression and that friends were generally supportive. However, no participants reported their social network suggested they seek help, which may suggest increasing mental health literacy, for both support seekers and responders, would be an opportunity to improve online mental health-related support.
大学生经常使用社交媒体网站与朋友联系。越来越多的研究表明,大学生和其他年轻人在社交媒体上寻求与心理健康相关的支持,这可能是一个独特的干预场所。
本研究的目的是调查大学生在脸书上展示抑郁情绪的看法,以及他们的社交媒体朋友如何回应。
对美国四所大学的学生进行了一项主要为定量的在线调查,并设有开放式回答问题。使用内容分析法对定性回答进行分析。
共有34名学生提供了定性回答以供分析,这些学生中85.3%为女性,平均年龄20.2岁(标准差=1.4),20.6%为少数族裔。报告发布抑郁相关内容的学生通常表达一种情绪或感受,但在帖子中未使用“抑郁”一词。约20%的人发布了关于糟糕一天的文字,15%的人发布了歌曲或音乐视频。只有一人报告发布了直接寻求帮助的声明。当朋友对帖子做出回应时,学生们通常将这些回应视为支持或激励的姿态。近15%的朋友在脸书之外联系了当事人。有一人收到了负面回应,没有回应建议当事人寻求帮助。
本研究发现,发布抑郁相关内容的大学生通常不会直接提及抑郁,而且朋友们通常给予支持。然而,没有参与者报告他们的社交网络建议他们寻求帮助,这可能表明提高寻求支持者和回应者的心理健康素养,将是改善在线心理健康相关支持的一个机会。