Bonsaksen Tore, Price Daicia, Lamph Gary, Kabelenga Isaac, Østertun Geirdal Amy
Faculty of Social and Health Sciences, Department of Health and Nursing Sciences, University of Inland Norway, Elverum, Norway.
Fcaulty of Health Sciences, Department of Health, VID Specialized University, Stavanger, Norway.
PLoS One. 2025 Jan 31;20(1):e0318507. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0318507. eCollection 2025.
Sleep problems are commonly related to stress and mental health problems. However, social media use has become widespread in the general population during recent years, and their addictive potential may influence people's sleep routine. In addition, the COVID-19 pandemic gave rise to substantial mental health problems in the population, and restrictions in social life gave social media a unique position as means for both entertainment and interpersonal contact. The aim of the study was to examine sleep problems in relationship to social media use in a cross-national sample two years after the COVID-19 outbreak. Participants were 1405 adults from four countries who completed a cross-sectional online survey. The data were analyzed with independent samples t-tests, Chi Squared tests of independence, and single and multivariable logistic regression analyses. Of the 858 (61.1%) participants who reported sleep problems during the past weeks, a substantial proportion (n = 353, 41.1%) related their sleep problems to their experience with COVID-19. With adjustments for age, gender, employment, and psychological distress, more hours of daily social media use was not significantly associated with sleep problems. However, higher age (OR: 1.13, p = 0.01), female gender (OR: 1.69, p<0.001), having employment (OR: 1.34, p = 0.04), and higher levels of psychological distress (OR: 1.20, p<0.001) were independently associated with sleep problems. While the debate about the pros and cons of social media use continue, this study suggests that higher levels of social media use was not of great concern for people's sleep quality in the late COVID-19 pandemic phase. However, other aspects of social media use (eg, time of the day, content of interactions, associated stress experience) may be more relevant for understanding sleep problems and may be taken into consideration for people who experience such problems.
睡眠问题通常与压力和心理健康问题有关。然而,近年来社交媒体在普通人群中的使用已变得十分普遍,其成瘾潜力可能会影响人们的睡眠习惯。此外,新冠疫情在人群中引发了大量心理健康问题,社交生活的限制使社交媒体成为娱乐和人际交流的独特方式。该研究的目的是在新冠疫情爆发两年后,在一个跨国样本中研究与社交媒体使用相关的睡眠问题。参与者是来自四个国家的1405名成年人,他们完成了一项横断面在线调查。数据通过独立样本t检验、卡方独立性检验以及单变量和多变量逻辑回归分析进行分析。在过去几周报告有睡眠问题的858名(61.1%)参与者中,相当一部分(n = 353,41.1%)将他们的睡眠问题与新冠疫情经历联系起来。在对年龄、性别、就业和心理困扰进行调整后,每天使用社交媒体的时间增加与睡眠问题并无显著关联。然而,年龄较大(OR:1.13,p = 0.01)、女性(OR:1.69,p<0.001)、有工作(OR:1.34,p = 0.04)以及心理困扰程度较高(OR:1.20,p<0.001)与睡眠问题独立相关。虽然关于社交媒体使用利弊的争论仍在继续,但这项研究表明,在新冠疫情后期,社交媒体使用量的增加对人们的睡眠质量影响不大。然而,社交媒体使用的其他方面(例如,一天中的时间、互动内容、相关压力体验)可能与理解睡眠问题更相关,对于有此类问题的人可能需要考虑这些方面。