Liu Jian, Wang Chaoxin, Meng Zhanpeng, Yu Chuanwen
College of Physical Education and Health, Heze University, Heze, China.
College of Physical Education, Shandong Normal University, Jinan, China.
Front Psychol. 2025 Jun 20;16:1580936. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2025.1580936. eCollection 2025.
Social media use has been linked to higher physical activity levels in older adults, but the mechanisms underlying this connection are not yet well understood. Emerging evidence suggests that social capital may act as a mediator, though little research has explored whether specific dimensions of social capital and self-efficacy mediate this relationship.
This study investigates how social media usage influences older adults' physical activity behavior, focusing on the mediating roles of social capital-structural, bonding, and bridging-and self-efficacy. The goal is to provide a foundation for strategies to promote physical activity in this population.
A cross-sectional survey was conducted between December 2023 and April 2024 involving 519 social media users (275 male and 244 female). Data were gathered using validated scales for social media usage intensity, physical activity levels (PARS-3), social capital, and self-efficacy. Structural equation modeling (SEM) was applied to examine the relationships between these variables and the mediating effects at play.
Older adults who engaged more actively with social media exhibited higher physical activity behavior ( = 0.179, < 0.05). Social capital, across its three dimensions-structural ( = 0.254), bonding ( = 0.294), and bridging ( = 0.237)-significantly mediated the link between social media usage and physical activity (all < 0.05). Additionally, self-efficacy was a critical, independent mediator ( = 0.242, < 0.05). A chain-mediating effect involving social capital dimensions and self-efficacy further strengthened this relationship ( < 0.05).
Social media use fosters physical activity in older adults by building social capital, mainly structural, bonding, and bridging types, and boosting self-efficacy. Enhancing the social media environment, developing social capital, and supporting self-efficacy are vital strategies for promoting physical activity in this group. The cross-sectional design of this study is a limitation, and future longitudinal research is needed to understand the causal relationships better.
社交媒体的使用与老年人较高的身体活动水平有关,但这种关联背后的机制尚未得到充分理解。新出现的证据表明,社会资本可能起到中介作用,不过很少有研究探讨社会资本的具体维度和自我效能感是否介导了这种关系。
本研究调查社交媒体使用如何影响老年人的身体活动行为,重点关注社会资本(结构型、凝聚型和桥接型)和自我效能感的中介作用。目标是为促进该人群身体活动的策略提供基础。
在2023年12月至2024年4月期间进行了一项横断面调查,涉及519名社交媒体用户(275名男性和244名女性)。使用经过验证的量表收集有关社交媒体使用强度、身体活动水平(PARS - 3)、社会资本和自我效能感的数据。应用结构方程模型(SEM)来检验这些变量之间的关系以及发挥作用的中介效应。
更积极使用社交媒体的老年人表现出更高的身体活动行为(β = 0.179,p < 0.05)。社会资本在其三个维度——结构型(β = 0.254)、凝聚型(β = 0.294)和桥接型(β = 0.237)——上显著介导了社交媒体使用与身体活动之间的联系(所有p < 0.05)。此外,自我效能感是一个关键的独立中介因素(β = 0.242,p < 0.05)。涉及社会资本维度和自我效能感的链式中介效应进一步加强了这种关系(p < 0.05)。
社交媒体的使用通过建立社会资本(主要是结构型、凝聚型和桥接型)和提高自我效能感来促进老年人的身体活动。改善社交媒体环境、发展社会资本和支持自我效能感是促进该群体身体活动的重要策略。本研究的横断面设计是一个局限性,未来需要进行纵向研究以更好地理解因果关系。