Thrul Johannes, Devkota Janardan, AlJuboori Dahlia, Regan Timothy, Alomairah Saud, Vidal Carol
Department of Mental Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center at Johns Hopkins, Baltimore, Maryland, United States.
Psychol Pop Media. 2025 Apr;14(2):207-209. doi: 10.1037/ppm0000574.
A recent meta-analysis published in this journal included 27 studies that experimentally manipulated social media use and investigated their impact on mental health outcomes (Ferguson, 2024). The author concluded that social media effects were not statistically different from zero. However, this meta-analysis did not investigate potential moderating effects of length of social media reduction or abstinence interventions. We conducted a reanalysis to investigate the impact of social media reduction/abstinence intervention length on mental health outcomes. We used the information available on the Open Science Framework platform related to the original meta-analysis and excluded seven studies because they were not reduction/abstinence interventions. We categorized studies into those with intervention lengths of <1 versus 1 week or longer and also tested for curvilinear relationships between intervention length (weeks and days as continuous variables) and outcomes by including quadratic terms. Stratified analyses indicated that interventions of <1 week resulted in significantly worse mental health outcomes ( = -0.175), while interventions of 1 week or longer resulted in significant improvements ( = 0.156). Analyses of intervention length as continuous moderator included 19 studies and showed significant quadratic effects for number of weeks ( = .013) and number of days ( = .018). These findings suggest that social media use reduction/abstinence interventions should have a minimum length of 1 week or longer to confer mental health benefits. An ideal intervention length may be around 3 weeks, but future research is needed to confirm this.
本期刊最近发表的一项荟萃分析纳入了27项研究,这些研究通过实验操纵社交媒体使用情况,并调查其对心理健康结果的影响(弗格森,2024年)。作者得出结论,社交媒体的影响在统计学上与零没有差异。然而,这项荟萃分析并未调查社交媒体减少或戒断干预时长的潜在调节作用。我们进行了重新分析,以调查社交媒体减少/戒断干预时长对心理健康结果的影响。我们利用了开放科学框架平台上与原始荟萃分析相关的可用信息,并排除了7项研究,因为它们不是减少/戒断干预。我们将研究分为干预时长小于1周与1周或更长时间的两类,并通过纳入二次项来检验干预时长(以周和天为连续变量)与结果之间的曲线关系。分层分析表明,干预时长小于1周会导致心理健康结果显著变差(=-0.175),而干预时长为1周或更长时间则会带来显著改善(=0.156)。将干预时长作为连续调节变量的分析纳入了19项研究,结果显示周数(=0.013)和天数(=0.018)存在显著的二次效应。这些发现表明,减少使用/戒断社交媒体的干预措施应至少持续1周或更长时间才能对心理健康有益。理想的干预时长可能约为3周,但需要未来的研究来证实这一点。