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Link Between Social Media and Depression Explained

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Written by Sabena Chadda

Studies have linked the use of social media to depression, but addiction to social media may explain the connection.

A team from the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine randomly selected 1,763 participants, ages ranging from 19-32, and asked them about their depressive symptoms, social media use and addictive behaviors. Social media use was measured by the number of visits and amount of time spent on 11 popular social media sites: Facebook, Twitter, Google+, YouTube, LinkedIn, Instagram, Pinterest, Tumblr, Vine, Snapchat and Reddit. To assess addiction to social media, the researchers modified a survey from Facebook that tells someone how addicted they are to something using a scale, looking at addictive behaviors such as mood modification, withdrawal and relapse.

In a presentation on March 30 at the annual meeting of the Society of Behavioral Medicine in Washington, DC, the researchers reported that half the participants spent at least an hour a day on non-work related social media use and made 30 site visits per week. Depending on whether the researchers used narrow or broad criteria for addiction, 14 to 44% of participants had scores that suggested a problem.

As expected, high social media usage was linked to higher addiction scores. But after taking addiction scores into consideration, social media use and depression were not significantly linked, (contrary to be belief). Addiction and depression did appear to be linked; however, addiction seemed to explain roughly three-quarters of the effect of social media use on depression, the researchers found.

“Ultimately, it appears that the way social media is used, rather than the amount social media is used, leads to maladaptive outcomes,” says Lindsay Howard of the Virginia Consortium Program in Clinical Psychology in Norfolk, who was not involved in the study. Howard found similarities in the study with her own research, which she also presented at the conference. Her team found that the act of seeking reassurance through social media may be related to higher degrees of dissatisfaction with one’s body and eating disorders, but the frequency of social media use was not tied to those depressive symptoms. “Physicians should educate their patients regarding how social media use may be related to depression and other negative outcomes,” Howard said. “

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