The relationship between social media use, stress symptoms and burden caused by coronavirus (Covid-19) in Germany and Italy: A cross-sectional and longitudinal investigation

Introduction: The need for “social distancing” to reduce the spread of Covid-19 is accompanied by an increase of social media use (SMU). Many people engage in intensive online activity to find information about the current Covid-19 situation and to interact about it with other users. The present stu...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: J. Brailovskaia, F. Cosci, G. Mansueto, J. Margraf
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-01-01
Series:Journal of Affective Disorders Reports
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666915320300676
id doaj-54342b13e4c549c7be91df360f63af34
record_format Article
spelling doaj-54342b13e4c549c7be91df360f63af342021-02-27T04:41:59ZengElsevierJournal of Affective Disorders Reports2666-91532021-01-013100067The relationship between social media use, stress symptoms and burden caused by coronavirus (Covid-19) in Germany and Italy: A cross-sectional and longitudinal investigationJ. Brailovskaia0F. Cosci1G. Mansueto2J. Margraf3Mental Health Research and Treatment Center, Department of Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy, Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Bochum, Germany; Corresponding author at: Mental Health Research and Treatment Center of Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Massenbergstr. 9-13, 44787 Bochum, GermanyDepartment of Health Sciences, University of Florence, Florence, ItalyDepartment of Health Sciences, University of Florence, Florence, ItalyMental Health Research and Treatment Center, Department of Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy, Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Bochum, GermanyIntroduction: The need for “social distancing” to reduce the spread of Covid-19 is accompanied by an increase of social media use (SMU). Many people engage in intensive online activity to find information about the current Covid-19 situation and to interact about it with other users. The present study investigated the extent of SMU as Covid-19 information source and its relationship with stress symptoms and burden caused by the pandemic in Germany and Italy. Methods: Cross-national longitudinal (Germany, N = 501; 3-months period) and cross-sectional (Italy, N = 951) data on Covid-19 information sources, stress symptoms and burden caused by Covid-19 were collected via online surveys. Results: About 50% of the German sample and about 60% of the Italian sample frequently used SM as Covid-19 information source. Cross-sectional analyses in both countries revealed that SMU is positively associated with stress symptoms and experienced burden. Moreover, stress symptoms mediated the link between SMU and burden. This was also confirmed by longitudinal analyses in Germany (burden assessed three months after SMU and stress symptoms). Limitations: The mostly female and relatively young sample composition limits the generalizability of present findings. Only two European countries were investigated. Conclusions: The present findings reveal a potential negative impact of enhanced SMU on individual mental health state and behavior. Additionally, they emphasize the significance of a conscious and cautious use of SM as information source specifically during the pandemic.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666915320300676Covid-19BurdenSocial media as information sourceStress symptomsGermanyItaly
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author J. Brailovskaia
F. Cosci
G. Mansueto
J. Margraf
spellingShingle J. Brailovskaia
F. Cosci
G. Mansueto
J. Margraf
The relationship between social media use, stress symptoms and burden caused by coronavirus (Covid-19) in Germany and Italy: A cross-sectional and longitudinal investigation
Journal of Affective Disorders Reports
Covid-19
Burden
Social media as information source
Stress symptoms
Germany
Italy
author_facet J. Brailovskaia
F. Cosci
G. Mansueto
J. Margraf
author_sort J. Brailovskaia
title The relationship between social media use, stress symptoms and burden caused by coronavirus (Covid-19) in Germany and Italy: A cross-sectional and longitudinal investigation
title_short The relationship between social media use, stress symptoms and burden caused by coronavirus (Covid-19) in Germany and Italy: A cross-sectional and longitudinal investigation
title_full The relationship between social media use, stress symptoms and burden caused by coronavirus (Covid-19) in Germany and Italy: A cross-sectional and longitudinal investigation
title_fullStr The relationship between social media use, stress symptoms and burden caused by coronavirus (Covid-19) in Germany and Italy: A cross-sectional and longitudinal investigation
title_full_unstemmed The relationship between social media use, stress symptoms and burden caused by coronavirus (Covid-19) in Germany and Italy: A cross-sectional and longitudinal investigation
title_sort relationship between social media use, stress symptoms and burden caused by coronavirus (covid-19) in germany and italy: a cross-sectional and longitudinal investigation
publisher Elsevier
series Journal of Affective Disorders Reports
issn 2666-9153
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Introduction: The need for “social distancing” to reduce the spread of Covid-19 is accompanied by an increase of social media use (SMU). Many people engage in intensive online activity to find information about the current Covid-19 situation and to interact about it with other users. The present study investigated the extent of SMU as Covid-19 information source and its relationship with stress symptoms and burden caused by the pandemic in Germany and Italy. Methods: Cross-national longitudinal (Germany, N = 501; 3-months period) and cross-sectional (Italy, N = 951) data on Covid-19 information sources, stress symptoms and burden caused by Covid-19 were collected via online surveys. Results: About 50% of the German sample and about 60% of the Italian sample frequently used SM as Covid-19 information source. Cross-sectional analyses in both countries revealed that SMU is positively associated with stress symptoms and experienced burden. Moreover, stress symptoms mediated the link between SMU and burden. This was also confirmed by longitudinal analyses in Germany (burden assessed three months after SMU and stress symptoms). Limitations: The mostly female and relatively young sample composition limits the generalizability of present findings. Only two European countries were investigated. Conclusions: The present findings reveal a potential negative impact of enhanced SMU on individual mental health state and behavior. Additionally, they emphasize the significance of a conscious and cautious use of SM as information source specifically during the pandemic.
topic Covid-19
Burden
Social media as information source
Stress symptoms
Germany
Italy
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666915320300676
work_keys_str_mv AT jbrailovskaia therelationshipbetweensocialmediausestresssymptomsandburdencausedbycoronaviruscovid19ingermanyanditalyacrosssectionalandlongitudinalinvestigation
AT fcosci therelationshipbetweensocialmediausestresssymptomsandburdencausedbycoronaviruscovid19ingermanyanditalyacrosssectionalandlongitudinalinvestigation
AT gmansueto therelationshipbetweensocialmediausestresssymptomsandburdencausedbycoronaviruscovid19ingermanyanditalyacrosssectionalandlongitudinalinvestigation
AT jmargraf therelationshipbetweensocialmediausestresssymptomsandburdencausedbycoronaviruscovid19ingermanyanditalyacrosssectionalandlongitudinalinvestigation
AT jbrailovskaia relationshipbetweensocialmediausestresssymptomsandburdencausedbycoronaviruscovid19ingermanyanditalyacrosssectionalandlongitudinalinvestigation
AT fcosci relationshipbetweensocialmediausestresssymptomsandburdencausedbycoronaviruscovid19ingermanyanditalyacrosssectionalandlongitudinalinvestigation
AT gmansueto relationshipbetweensocialmediausestresssymptomsandburdencausedbycoronaviruscovid19ingermanyanditalyacrosssectionalandlongitudinalinvestigation
AT jmargraf relationshipbetweensocialmediausestresssymptomsandburdencausedbycoronaviruscovid19ingermanyanditalyacrosssectionalandlongitudinalinvestigation
_version_ 1724248253713612800