Social media use and adolescent mental health: findings from the UK Millennium Cohort Study
Social media use and adolescent mental health: findings from the UK Millennium Cohort Study
Background
Evidence suggests social media use is associated with mental health in young people but underlying processes are not well understood. This paper i) assesses whether social media use is associated with adolescents' depressive symptoms, and ii) investigates multiple potential explanatory pathways via online harassment, sleep, self-esteem and body image.
Methods
We used population based data from the UK Millennium Cohort Study on 10,904 14 year olds. Multivariate regression and path models were used to examine associations between social media use and depressive symptoms.
Findings
The magnitude of association between social media use and depressive symptoms was larger for girls than for boys. Compared with 1–3 h of daily use: 3 to < 5 h 26% increase in scores vs 21%; ≥ 5 h 50% vs 35% for girls and boys respectively. Greater social media use related to online harassment, poor sleep, low self-esteem and poor body image; in turn these related to higher depressive symptom scores. Multiple potential intervening pathways were apparent, for example: greater hours social media use related to body weight dissatisfaction (≥ 5 h 31% more likely to be dissatisfied), which in turn linked to depressive symptom scores directly (body dissatisfaction 15% higher depressive symptom scores) and indirectly via self-esteem.
Interpretation
Our findings highlight the potential pitfalls of lengthy social media use for young people's mental health. Findings are highly relevant for the development of guidelines for the safe use of social media and calls on industry to more tightly regulate hours of social media use.
59-68
Kelly, Yvonne
71c6a35e-28fa-4627-95a9-38fd1c656a22
Zilanawala, Afshin
dddbeee8-798a-441c-bb79-f0d3908647dd
Booker, Cara
f47e1f0b-2a3d-46b5-b895-39e7410655aa
Sacker, Amanda
3ca352e3-d8ee-472f-881d-9d9a9419efca
Kelly, Yvonne
71c6a35e-28fa-4627-95a9-38fd1c656a22
Zilanawala, Afshin
dddbeee8-798a-441c-bb79-f0d3908647dd
Booker, Cara
f47e1f0b-2a3d-46b5-b895-39e7410655aa
Sacker, Amanda
3ca352e3-d8ee-472f-881d-9d9a9419efca
Kelly, Yvonne, Zilanawala, Afshin, Booker, Cara and Sacker, Amanda
(2019)
Social media use and adolescent mental health: findings from the UK Millennium Cohort Study.
EClinicalMedicine, 6, .
(doi:10.1016/j.eclinm.2018.12.005).
Abstract
Background
Evidence suggests social media use is associated with mental health in young people but underlying processes are not well understood. This paper i) assesses whether social media use is associated with adolescents' depressive symptoms, and ii) investigates multiple potential explanatory pathways via online harassment, sleep, self-esteem and body image.
Methods
We used population based data from the UK Millennium Cohort Study on 10,904 14 year olds. Multivariate regression and path models were used to examine associations between social media use and depressive symptoms.
Findings
The magnitude of association between social media use and depressive symptoms was larger for girls than for boys. Compared with 1–3 h of daily use: 3 to < 5 h 26% increase in scores vs 21%; ≥ 5 h 50% vs 35% for girls and boys respectively. Greater social media use related to online harassment, poor sleep, low self-esteem and poor body image; in turn these related to higher depressive symptom scores. Multiple potential intervening pathways were apparent, for example: greater hours social media use related to body weight dissatisfaction (≥ 5 h 31% more likely to be dissatisfied), which in turn linked to depressive symptom scores directly (body dissatisfaction 15% higher depressive symptom scores) and indirectly via self-esteem.
Interpretation
Our findings highlight the potential pitfalls of lengthy social media use for young people's mental health. Findings are highly relevant for the development of guidelines for the safe use of social media and calls on industry to more tightly regulate hours of social media use.
Text
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More information
Accepted/In Press date: 17 December 2018
e-pub ahead of print date: 4 January 2019
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 453006
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/453006
ISSN: 2589-5370
PURE UUID: 01fe8bf6-df33-47b1-a3d3-3019e5900d04
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Date deposited: 07 Jan 2022 13:41
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:07
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Contributors
Author:
Yvonne Kelly
Author:
Cara Booker
Author:
Amanda Sacker
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