Department of Health Promotion, Norwegian Institute of Public Health, Bergen, Norway.
Centre for Evaluation of Public Health Measures, Norwegian Institute of Public Health, Oslo, Norway.
Front Public Health. 2023 Jun 2;11:1192788. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2023.1192788. eCollection 2023.
Cyberbullying has been extensively studied and is associated with adverse mental health outcomes in adolescents. However, adolescents may also experience a range of other negative experiences, such as name-calling, threats, exclusion, and unwanted attention or contact from others. Few studies have investigated how adolescents' mental health is affected by these relatively common and less severe types of negative experiences on social media (SOME). To assess the association between mental health outcomes and two aspects of negative experiences on SOME; unwanted attention and negative acts and exclusion.
This study is based on a survey conducted in 2020/21 consisting of 3,253 Norwegian adolescents (56% female, M = 17 years). Eight statements about negative experiences on SOME were asked and combined into two composite measures: "Unwanted attention from others" and "Negative acts and exclusion." Dependent variables in regression models were symptoms of anxiety, symptoms of depression, and mental well-being. Covariates in all models included age, gender, subjective socioeconomic status, and amount of SOME-use.
Both "negative acts and exclusion" and "unwanted attention from others" on SOME were consistently positively associated with self-reported symptoms of depression and anxiety, and negatively associated with mental well-being in both crude and adjusted analysis.
The results are indicative of an important relationship between experiencing negative events on SOME, even presumably less severe events, and worse mental health and well-being. Future research should extricate the potential causal relationship between negative experiences on SOME and mental health, as well as exploring potential precipitating and intermediating factors.
网络欺凌已经得到了广泛的研究,并且与青少年的不良心理健康结果有关。然而,青少年也可能经历一系列其他负面经历,例如被人辱骂、受到威胁、被排斥以及被他人不必要的关注或接触。很少有研究调查青少年的心理健康如何受到社交媒体上这些相对常见且不那么严重的负面经历类型的影响。为了评估心理健康结果与社交媒体上两种负面经历之间的关联;不必要的关注和负面行为以及排斥。
本研究基于 2020/21 年进行的一项调查,共有 3253 名挪威青少年(56%为女性,M=17 岁)参与。调查询问了 8 个关于社交媒体上负面经历的陈述,并将其组合成两个综合衡量指标:“他人不必要的关注”和“负面行为和排斥”。回归模型中的因变量为焦虑症状、抑郁症状和心理健康。所有模型中的协变量包括年龄、性别、主观社会经济地位和社交媒体使用量。
社交媒体上的“负面行为和排斥”和“他人不必要的关注”都与自我报告的抑郁和焦虑症状呈正相关,并且在未调整和调整后的分析中都与心理健康呈负相关。
这些结果表明,在社交媒体上经历负面事件,即使是可能不太严重的事件,与更差的心理健康和幸福感之间存在重要关系。未来的研究应该阐明社交媒体上的负面经历与心理健康之间的潜在因果关系,以及探索潜在的促成和中介因素。