National Centre for Youth Substance Use Research, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, Australia.
School of Psychology, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, Australia.
Addiction. 2023 Feb;118(2):206-217. doi: 10.1111/add.16020. Epub 2022 Sep 8.
There is a growing body of literature exploring the types of substance-related content and their portrayals on various social media platforms. We aimed to summarize how content related to substances is portrayed on various social media platforms.
This systematic review was pre-registered on PROSPERO (ref: CRD42021291853). A comprehensive search was conducted in the databases of PubMed, Scopus, PsycINFO and Web of Science in April 2021. Original qualitative studies published post-2004 that included thematic and sentiment analyses of social media content on tobacco, alcohol, psychostimulant, e-cigarette, cannabis, opiate, stimulant/amphetamine, inhalant and novel psychoactive substance were included. Social media platforms were defined as online web- or application-based platforms that allowed users to generate content and interact via 'liking', comment or messaging features. Only studies that included summative and/or thematic content analyses of substance-related social media content were included.
A total of 73 studies, which covered 15 905 182 substance-related posts on Twitter, YouTube, Instagram, Pinterest, TikTok and Weibo, were identified. A total of 76.3% of all substance-related content was positive in its depiction of substance use, with 20.2% of content depicting use negatively. Sentiment regarding opiate use however was commonly negative (55.5%). Most studies identified themes relating to Health, Safety and Harms (65.0%) of substance use. Themes relating to Promotions/Advertisements (63.3%), Informative content (55.0%) and Use behaviours (43.3%) were also frequently identified.
Substance-related content that promotes engagement with substance use or actively depicts use appears to be widely available on social media. The large public presence of this content may have concerning influences on attitudes, behaviours and risk perceptions relating to substance use, particularly among the most vulnerable and heaviest users of social media-adolescents and young adults.
越来越多的文献探讨了各种社交媒体平台上与物质相关的内容类型及其呈现方式。本研究旨在总结各种社交媒体平台上物质相关内容的呈现方式。
本系统评价预先在 PROSPERO(注册号:CRD42021291853)上注册。2021 年 4 月,在 PubMed、Scopus、PsycINFO 和 Web of Science 数据库中进行了全面检索。纳入了 2004 年后发表的包含主题分析和社交媒体内容情绪分析的原始定性研究,研究内容涉及烟草、酒精、精神兴奋剂、电子烟、大麻、阿片类药物、兴奋剂/安非他命、吸入剂和新型精神活性物质。社交媒体平台被定义为允许用户通过“点赞”、评论或消息功能生成内容并进行互动的在线网络或应用程序为基础的平台。仅纳入包括物质相关社交媒体内容的总结性和/或主题内容分析的研究。
共确定了 73 项研究,这些研究涵盖了在 Twitter、YouTube、Instagram、Pinterest、TikTok 和微博上与 15905182 个与物质相关的帖子。在所有与物质相关的内容中,有 76.3%的内容对物质使用的描述是积极的,20.2%的内容对物质使用的描述是消极的。然而,关于阿片类药物使用的情绪通常是负面的(55.5%)。大多数研究确定了与物质使用的健康、安全和危害(65.0%)相关的主题。与促销/广告(63.3%)、信息内容(55.0%)和使用行为(43.3%)相关的主题也经常被确定。
促进与物质使用互动或积极描述使用的物质相关内容在社交媒体上似乎广泛存在。这种内容在公众中的大量存在可能对与物质使用相关的态度、行为和风险认知产生令人担忧的影响,尤其是在青少年和年轻社交媒体重度使用者等最脆弱的人群中。