BingeDrinking-Using Social Media to Understand College Binge Drinking: Qualitative Study

被引:8
作者
Cirillo, Madison N. [1 ]
Halbert, Jennifer P. [1 ]
Smith, Jessica Gomez [2 ]
Alamiri, Nour Sami [1 ]
Ingersoll, Karen S. [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Virginia, Dept Publ Hlth Sci, Sch Med, Charlottesville, VA 22903 USA
[2] Univ Virginia, Dept Psychiat & Neurobehav Sci, Sch Med, 560 Ray C Hunt Dr, Charlottesville, VA 22903 USA
关键词
college students; binge drinking; social media; young adults; PARENT-BASED INTERVENTION; NETWORKING SITES; ALCOHOL-USE; RANDOMIZED-TRIAL; SUBSTANCE USE; FACEBOOK; STUDENTS; ASSOCIATIONS; EXPOSURE; TWITTER;
D O I
10.2196/36239
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
Background: Hazardous drinking among college students persists, despite ongoing university alcohol education and alcohol intervention programs. College students often post comments or pictures of drinking episodes on social media platforms. Objective: This study aimed to understand one university's student attitudes toward alcohol use by examining student posts about drinking on social media platforms and to identify opportunities to reduce alcohol-related harm and inform novel alcohol interventions. Methods: We analyzed social media posts from 7 social media platforms using qualitative inductive coding based on grounded theory to identify the contexts of student drinking and the attitudes and behaviors of students and peers during drinking episodes. We reviewed publicly available social media posts that referenced alcohol, collaborating with undergraduate students to select their most used platforms and develop locally relevant search terms; all posts in our data set were generated by students associated with a specific university. From the codes, we derived themes about student culture regarding alcohol use. Results: In total, 1151 social media posts were included in this study. These included 809 Twitter tweets, 113 Instagram posts, 100 Greekrank posts, 64 Reddit posts, 34 College Confidential posts, 23 Facebook posts, and 8 YouTube posts. Posts included both implicit and explicit portrayals of alcohol use. Across all types of posts reviewed, positive drinking attitudes were most common, followed by negative and then neutral attitudes, but valence varied by platform. Posts that portrayed drinking positively received positive peer feedback and indicate that drinking is viewed by students as an essential and positive part of university student culture. Conclusions: Social media provide a real-time picture of students' behavior during their own and others' heavy drinking. Posts portray heavy drinking as a normal part of student culture, reinforced by peers' positive feedback on posts. Interventions for college drinking should help students manage alcohol intake in real time, provide safety information during alcohol use episodes, and raise student awareness of web-based privacy concerns and reputation management. Additional interventions for students, alumni, and parents are needed to address positive attitudes about and traditions of drinking.
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页数:12
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