Department of Communications and New Media, National University of Singapore.
Health Commun. 2022 Sep;37(10):1337-1344. doi: 10.1080/10410236.2021.1888438. Epub 2021 Feb 18.
Social media has been widely used as an important source of health information, particularly during public health crises. However, findings regarding social media's impact on young adults' mental health are mixed. There is a need to identify social mechanisms underlying the effect of social media on mental health outcomes. Our study breaks new ground by proposing and testing a moderated mediation pathway from social media use to stress in young adults during the COVID-19 pandemic. We conducted a two-wave online panel survey in the context of China. With a general basis of the Street's three-stage model, our results indicated that social media failed to directly affect young adults' stress. Instead, fatalism completely mediated this relationship. Also, one's perceived social media exhaustion negatively moderated this mediation pathway. The findings have significant theoretical and practical implications for the use of social media to promote health, well-being, and quality of life among young people during public health crises.
社交媒体已被广泛用作获取健康信息的重要来源,尤其是在公共卫生危机期间。然而,关于社交媒体对年轻人心理健康影响的研究结果却不一致。有必要确定社交媒体对心理健康结果影响的社会机制。我们的研究通过提出并测试一个有调节的中介途径,为解决这一问题开辟了新的途径,该途径将社交媒体的使用与 COVID-19 大流行期间年轻人的压力联系起来。我们在中国的背景下进行了两次在线小组调查。基于斯特赖特的三阶段模型,我们的结果表明,社交媒体并未直接影响年轻人的压力。相反,宿命论完全中介了这种关系。此外,个体感知到的社交媒体疲惫感负向调节了这种中介途径。这些发现对在公共卫生危机期间利用社交媒体促进年轻人的健康、幸福和生活质量具有重要的理论和实践意义。