Ghanayem Leen K, Shannon Holly, Khodr Lida, McQuaid Robyn J, Hellemans Kim G C
Department of Neuroscience, Carleton University, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
University of Ottawa Institute of Mental Health Research, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
Front Psychiatry. 2024 Jan 31;15:1247807. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2024.1247807. eCollection 2024.
Undergraduate university students experienced many academic and non-academic stressors during the first year of the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, putting them at a greater risk of negative mental health outcomes. Reports worldwide have shown high incidences of depressive, anxiety, and stress scores among university students at the beginning of the pandemic. Emerging evidence also suggests that to cope with the stress and loneliness of the pandemic, many youth and young adults increased the amount of time they spent on social media platforms.
Undergraduate students participated in an online study aimed to understand the link between time spent on social media, coping through the use of social media and problematic social media use (PSMU) with mental health symptoms, such as stress, depression, anxiety, and loneliness, during the COVID-19 pandemic.
While time spent on social media was only weakly associated with stress, depression, anxiety and loneliness scores, PSMU more strongly mapped onto these outcomes. Additionally, students who were coping highly using social media displayed elevated stress, depression, anxiety and loneliness levels in comparison to those reporting low levels of coping with social media. Finally, students who reported high levels of coping using social media displayed higher PSMU scores, with this relationship appearing more pronounced in students who had higher levels of loneliness.
These data support evidence that it is not necessarily time spent on social media but rather PSMU that is relevant for mental health symptoms, and that PSMU is exacerbated by loneliness. Moreover, the current results highlight the effects of maladaptive coping on mental health symptoms and PSMU among university students during the COVID-19 pandemic.
在冠状病毒病(COVID-19)大流行的第一年,大学生经历了许多学业和非学业压力源,这使他们出现负面心理健康结果的风险更高。全球报告显示,在大流行开始时,大学生中抑郁、焦虑和压力得分的发生率很高。新出现的证据还表明,为了应对大流行带来的压力和孤独感,许多青少年和年轻人增加了在社交媒体平台上花费的时间。
大学生参与了一项在线研究,旨在了解在COVID-19大流行期间,花在社交媒体上的时间、通过使用社交媒体应对以及问题性社交媒体使用(PSMU)与心理健康症状(如压力、抑郁、焦虑和孤独感)之间的联系。
虽然花在社交媒体上的时间与压力、抑郁、焦虑和孤独感得分仅存在微弱关联,但PSMU与这些结果的关联更为紧密。此外,与那些报告使用社交媒体应对程度较低的学生相比,高度使用社交媒体应对的学生表现出更高的压力、抑郁、焦虑和孤独水平。最后,报告使用社交媒体应对程度较高的学生表现出更高的PSMU得分,这种关系在孤独感较强的学生中更为明显。
这些数据支持了这样的证据,即与心理健康症状相关的不一定是花在社交媒体上的时间,而是PSMU,并且孤独会加剧PSMU。此外,当前结果突出了在COVID-19大流行期间,适应不良的应对方式对大学生心理健康症状和PSMU的影响。