社交媒体使用与新冠肺炎:内华达大学雷诺分校学生健康行为、知识和心理健康的跨学科研究

Molly M. Hagen, S. Hartzell, Paul G. Devereux
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引用次数: 1

摘要

人们普遍依赖社交媒体获取健康信息,但人们对社交媒体使用对传染病大流行期间健康行为的影响知之甚少。我们使用大学生名录中的随机样本,邀请学生在冠状病毒大流行期间进行横断面在线调查。调查问题评估了对公共卫生指南的遵守情况、对新冠肺炎/SAS-CoV2的了解以及心理健康症状。根据学生的SMU水平,将其分类为:(1)无,(2)部分使用,或(3)主要来源。加权回归用于将SMU与依从性(五分制)和知识(六分制)联系起来,得分越高表示依从性/知识越高,并与心理健康(PHQ-8和GAD-7量表)联系起来。SMU对COVID-19信息的加权患病率为71.3%,17.1%的学生认为SMU是他们新冠肺炎信息的主要来源(总N=181)。平均依从性范围从无的3.71±0.17(SEM)到主要来源的3.94±0.14(扫描电镜),在95%置信水平下差异无统计学意义。知识得分从没有的5.44±0.11(SEM)下降到一些的5.38±0.08,主要来源的5.23±0.16(p=0.056)。没有、一些使用和主要来源的抑郁症加权患病率分别为38.7%、43.1%和51.9%;焦虑的加权患病率分别为19.7%、27.0%和36.7%。流行病期间信息SMU对健康行为的影响值得进一步研究,特别是在遵守公共卫生指南方面。在新冠肺炎的情况下,SMU可能与知识和心理健康呈负相关。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Social Media Use and COVID-19: A Cross-Sectional Study Examining Health Behaviors, Knowledge, and Mental Health Among University of Nevada, Reno Students
Reliance on social media for health information is widespread, yet impacts of social media use (SMU) on health behaviors during infectious disease pandemics are poorly understood. We used a random sample from a university student directory to invite students to take a cross-sectional online survey during the coronavirus pandemic. Survey questions assessed adherence to public health guidelines, knowledge of COVID-19/SARS-CoV2, and mental health symptoms. Students were classified based on their level of SMU for information on COVID-19 as: (1) none, (2) some use, or (3) main source. Weighted regressions were used to relate SMU to adherence (five-point scale) and knowledge (six-point scale), with higher scores representing higher adherence/knowledge, and to mental health (PHQ-8 and GAD-7 scales). The weighted prevalence of SMU for COVD-19 information was 71.3%, and 17.1% of students identified SMU as their main source of COVID-19 information (total N = 181). Mean adherence ranged from 3.71±0.17 (SEM) for none, to 3.94±0.14 (SEM) for main source, and differences were not statistically significant at the 95% confidence level. Knowledge scores decreased from 5.44±0.11 (SEM) for none, to 5.38±0.08 for some, and 5.23±0.16 for main source (p = 0.056). The weighted prevalence of depression was 38.7%, 43.1%, and 51.9% for none, some use, and main source; weighted prevalence of anxiety was 19.7%, 27.0%, and 36.7%, respectively. Effects of SMU for information during pandemics on health behavior merits further research, especially regarding adherence to public health guidelines. In the case of COVID-19, SMU may be negatively correlated with knowledge and mental health.
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