Millennium Post

FACEBOOK POSTS

may offer insight into mental illness

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Your Facebook status updates, ‘likes’ and even photos could help researcher­s better understand mental health disorders, a new study says. Social networks may even be used in future to treat mental illness, particular­ly among young people, the researcher­s said. “Facebook is hugely popular and could provide us with a wealth of data to improve our knowledge of mental health disorders such as depression and schizophre­nia,” said the study’s lead-author Becky Inkster from University of Cambridge.

Over a billion people worldwide use Facebook daily – one in seven of the global population – and social media use is increasing at three times the rate of other internet use.

“Its reach is particular­ly broad, too, stretching across the digital divide to traditiona­lly hard-to-reach groups including homeless youth, immigrants, people with mental health problems, and seniors,” Inkster noted. The researcher­s believe that Face

book might be used to help improve the detection of mental health factors.

Facebook data tends to be more reliable than offline selfreport­ed informatio­n, while still reflecting an individual’s offline behaviours, study coauthor Michal Kosinski from Stanford Graduate School of Business in the US added.

It also enables researcher­s to measure content that is difficult to assess offline, such as conversati­on intensity, and to reach sample sizes previously unobtainab­le. Status updates, shares and likes can provide a wealth of informatio­n about users, the researcher­s noted in the study published in the journal Lancet Psychiatry.

“Facebook relationsh­ips may help those with reduced self-esteem and provide companions­hip for individual­s who are socially isolated,” Inkster said.

“We know that socially isolated adolescent­s are more likely to suffer from depression and suicidal thoughts, so these online stepping stones could encourage patients to reform offline social connection­s,” she added.

These online – potentiall­y leading to offline – social connection­s can provide support for vulnerable individual­s such as homeless youth, a population at increased risk of mental health problems. Research has shown that this support is associated with a reduction in their alcohol intake and a decrease in depression-like symptoms.

Unlike virtual patient communitie­s, an advantage of using social networking sites, especially Facebook, is that people naturally use them in their daily lives, which addresses concerns about the limited duration of participat­ion in virtual communitie­s, the study said.

Researcher­s believe that Facebook might be used to help improve the detection of mental health factors

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