Problematic internet use prior to and during the COVID-19 pandemic

IF 4.6 Q2 MATERIALS SCIENCE, BIOMATERIALS
Alfredo Zarco-Alpuente, Víctor Ciudad-Fernández, R. Ballester-Arnal, J. Billieux, M. Gil-Llario, Daniel L. King, Inmaculada Montoya-Castilla, P. Samper, J. Castro-Calvo
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引用次数: 16

Abstract

The health and socio-economic challenges arising from the COVID-19 pandemic have led to greater reliance on the internet to meet basic needs and responsibilities. Greater engagement in online activities may have negative mental and physical health consequences for some vulnerable individuals, particularly under mandatory self-isolation or ‘lockdown’ conditions. The present study investigated whether changes in levels of involvement in online activities during the COVID-19 pandemic (i.e., watching TV series, online sexual activities, video games, social networks, gambling, online shopping, and instant messaging) were associated with problematic internet use, as well as whether certain psychological risk factors (positive/negative affect and impulsivity) were significant predictors of these changes. A total of 1,275 participants (66.1% female, aged between 18-55 years) completed an online survey while in lockdown in Spain (April 15th-23rd, 2020). The survey assessed current engagement in seven different online activities and their engagement prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as psychological risk factors (affect and impulsivity). Most participants (between 60.8%-98.6% depending on the activity) reported no changes in participation in online activities, but there was a significant increase in weekly internet use (between 25 and 336 min). However, increased internet use was not accompanied by a corresponding increase in problematic use, except for problematic TV series watching and video gaming. Psychological risk factors considered in the study (affect, impulsivity traits) were largely minor or non-significant predictors. Thus, increased internet use during the lockdown in Spain was not related to a proportional growth in problematic usage, suggesting that these behavioral changes may constitute adaptive coping strategies in the context of the pandemic.
在COVID-19大流行之前和期间,有问题的互联网使用
COVID-19大流行带来的健康和社会经济挑战导致人们更加依赖互联网来满足基本需求和承担基本责任。更多地参与在线活动可能会对一些弱势群体的身心健康产生负面影响,特别是在强制性自我隔离或“封锁”条件下。本研究调查了COVID-19大流行期间参与网络活动水平的变化(即看电视剧、在线性活动、视频游戏、社交网络、赌博、网上购物和即时通讯)是否与有问题的互联网使用有关,以及某些心理风险因素(积极/消极影响和冲动性)是否是这些变化的重要预测因素。在西班牙封锁期间(2020年4月15日至23日),共有1275名参与者(66.1%为女性,年龄在18-55岁之间)完成了一项在线调查。该调查评估了当前七种不同在线活动的参与度,以及他们在COVID-19大流行之前的参与度,以及心理风险因素(影响和冲动)。大多数参与者(根据活动的不同,在60.8%-98.6%之间)报告在参与在线活动方面没有变化,但每周使用互联网的时间显著增加(在25到336分钟之间)。然而,除了看有问题的电视连续剧和电子游戏外,互联网使用的增加并不伴随着问题使用的相应增加。研究中考虑的心理风险因素(情感、冲动特征)在很大程度上是次要的或不显著的预测因素。因此,西班牙封锁期间互联网使用的增加与问题使用的比例增长无关,这表明这些行为变化可能构成大流行背景下的适应性应对策略。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
ACS Applied Bio Materials
ACS Applied Bio Materials Chemistry-Chemistry (all)
CiteScore
9.40
自引率
2.10%
发文量
464
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