Adolescent Social Media Use and Mental Health in the Environmental Influences on Child Health Outcomes Study

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

4-1-2025

Publication Title

The Journal of adolescent health

Abstract

PURPOSE: Research on adolescent social media use focuses on negative mental health outcomes, with less attention on potential positive outcomes. The current study addresses this limitation by investigating associations between adolescent social media use and both psychological well-being and psychopathology.

METHODS: Three US-based pediatric cohort sites participating in the National Institutes of Health Environmental influences on Child Health Outcomes study contributed cross-sectional survey data. Adolescents (13-18 years) self-reported the time spent and type of (active, passive) social media use, and their psychological well-being (Patient-Reported Outcome Measurement Information System [PROMIS] Life Satisfaction and Meaning and Purpose), psychopathology (Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire and PROMIS Depressive Symptoms), and peer relationship quality (PROMIS Peer Relationships). We estimated associations between social media use and 4 mental health groups aligned to the dual factor model of mental health (high well-being/low psychopathology; high well-being/high psychopathology; low well-being/low psychopathology; low well-being/high psychopathology), and tested interactions with peer relationships. Models were adjusted for age, sex, race, ethnicity, and family income.

RESULTS: Participants (N = 963) were sociodemographically diverse (22% income ≤130% federal poverty level; 42% adolescents of color). Elastic net regressions revealed more hours using social media increased the probability of being in the high psychopathology/low well-being group; adolescents with poor peer relationships spending ≥7 hours/day on social media had the greatest risk of poor mental health. Positive peer relationships were the strongest predictor of positive mental health.

DISCUSSION: Peer relationships were the most meaningful contribution to adolescent mental health, and quality of social media use had little influence.

Medical Subject Headings

Humans; Social Media; Adolescent; Female; Male; Mental Health; Cross-Sectional Studies; United States; Peer Group; Surveys and Questionnaires; Adolescent Behavior; Mental Disorders

PubMed ID

39918508

ePublication

ePub ahead of print

Volume

76

Issue

4

First Page

647

Last Page

656

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