Dong Linying, Yang Lixia
Ted Rogers School of Information Technology Management, Toronto Metropolitan University.
Department of Psychology, Toronto Metropolitan University.
Aging Health Res. 2023 Mar;3(1):100119. doi: 10.1016/j.ahr.2023.100119. Epub 2023 Jan 26.
This study examines the impact of older adults' online social networks on their COVID-19 anxiety, directly or indirectly through social transmission of negative information about COVID-19. Social networks were indexed by both bonding capital (i.e., social relationships formed with family and friends) and bridging capital (i.e., social relationships formed through casual social networks).
An on-line survey was conducted with 190 older adults who were in self-isolation in Ontario in the early waves of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020.
Bonding and bridging capital showed different impacts on older adults' informational behavior and COVID-19 anxiety. While bonding capital deterred older adults from transmitting negative COVID-19 information and thus reduced COVID-19 anxiety, bridging capital contributed to increased dissemination of negative information and thus heightened older adults' anxiety.
Our findings shed light on the detrimental behavioral and psychological impact of casual online social networks on older adults amidst a public health crisis.
本研究探讨老年人的在线社交网络对其新冠焦虑的影响,这种影响是直接的,还是通过新冠负面信息的社会传播间接产生的。社交网络通过联结资本(即与家人和朋友形成的社会关系)和桥接资本(即通过休闲社交网络形成的社会关系)来衡量。
2020年新冠疫情早期,对安大略省190名处于自我隔离状态的老年人进行了在线调查。
联结资本和桥接资本对老年人的信息行为和新冠焦虑有不同影响。联结资本抑制老年人传播新冠负面信息,从而降低了新冠焦虑,而桥接资本则导致负面信息传播增加,进而加剧了老年人的焦虑。
我们的研究结果揭示了在公共卫生危机期间,休闲在线社交网络对老年人产生的有害行为和心理影响。