How does COVID-19-related social media usage influence disordered eating? A daily diary study among Chinese adults during lockdown

被引:0
作者
Bijie Tie
Chengquan Zhu
Jinbo He
Jiang Qiu
机构
[1] Southwest University,Center for Studies of Education and Psychology of Ethnic Minorities in Southwest China
[2] Ministry of Education,Key Laboratory of Cognition and Personality (SWU)
[3] Sun Yat-Sen University,Department of Psychology
[4] Zhengzhou University,School of Education
[5] The Chinese University of Hong Kong,School of Humanities and Social Science
[6] Southwest University (SWU),Faculty of Psychology
[7] Beijing Normal University,Southwest University Branch, Collaborative Innovation Center of Assessment Toward Basic Education Quality
来源
Journal of Eating Disorders | / 11卷
关键词
Social media; COVID-19-related anxiety; COVID-19-related stress; Psychological distress; Disordered eating;
D O I
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Our study examined how using social media during the COVID-19 lockdown might be related to individuals’ mental health, particularly stress, anxiety, and disordered eating. Using a daily diary design, we found that individuals with more frequent social media use to get information about COVID-19 exhibited higher stress and anxiety related to the pandemic, higher general psychological distress, as well as higher disordered eating. Multilevel mediation analyses further showed that COVID-19-related anxiety played a mediating role in the connection between COVID-19-related social media use and disordered eating, at the within-person level. These findings underscore the complex impacts of social media use during lockdowns and highlight the importance of managing social media consumption to protect mental health and well-being in such challenging times.
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