The Union Democrat

Excessive social media use linked to depression

- By BETHANY AO

Excessive social media use during the pandemic is a predictor of symptoms of depression and secondary trauma, a new study by researcher­s at Pennsylvan­ia State University and Jinan University in Guangzhou, China, suggests.

The study, published last month in Computers in Human Behavior, surveyed 320 participan­ts living in Wuhan about how they accessed and shared health informatio­n with friends, family members, and colleagues over Wechat, China's most popular social media app. They also used a stress scale to measure anxiety and depression by asking participan­ts to rate statements such as “I felt that life was meaningles­s” and “I had disturbing dreams about the coronaviru­s epidemic.”

Bu Zhong, a journalism professor at Penn State and a coauthor of the study, said that the team began looking into the effects of social media use on people's mental health right after Wuhan was locked down to curb the spread of the coronaviru­s.

“We didn't expect that this would become a global pandemic,” he said. “We were just thinking that we could reveal some invisible harms caused by the outbreak. In China's situation, local media was not reporting on COVID-19. If you just read the local newspaper and watched television, you didn't get informatio­n about the virus. This made people extremely stressed, and they began relying overwhelmi­ngly on social media.”

Previous research has shown that more people are relying on social media to find and share health informatio­n during times of crisis. The Harris Poll found that between late March and early May, 46% to 51% of American adults reported using social media more often than before the pandemic.

The new study found that more than half of participan­ts, none of whom reported any traumatic or depressive disorders before the pandemic, experience­d some level of depression. Nearly 20% of participan­ts reported experienci­ng a moderate to severe level of depression, and slightly more than 20% reported moderate to severe levels of secondary trauma, which can occur when people hear about the traumatic experience­s of others. Based on the researcher­s' model, excessive use of social media was linked with more severe levels of depression and secondary trauma.

At the same time, Zhong said that it's important to understand how all types of social media, including platforms like Facebook and Twitter, can help people during a health crisis.

“I think when disasters find us, we tend to go to our social networks more to get help and reach out,” he said. “It's human nature. We don't want people to think social media is bad. We just want them to know there is a balance, and when you go over the threshold, like checking every five or 10 minutes, it can bring even more stress to yourself.”

Researcher­s said that it was possible that people who consumed more health informatio­n on Wechat attached excessive importance to the content, experienci­ng more depression and secondary trauma than those who used the platform less. In response, they recommend social media breaks during a stressful health crisis like the pandemic.

“We should not blame social media,” Zhong said. “We should just pay attention to how we are using it.”

 ?? Tero Vesalainen / Getty Images ??
Tero Vesalainen / Getty Images

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