Affiliation:
1. Department of Psychology Florida International University Miami USA
2. Center for Children and Families Florida International University Miami USA
3. Department of Health Behavior and Health Systems, School of Public Health University of North Texas Health Science Center Fort Worth USA
4. Department of Psychiatry University of Michigan Ann Arbor USA
Abstract
AbstractIntroductionWhile adolescent substance use (SU) may be viewed as normative, SU can quickly escalate leading to consequences. Social media use may increase SU risk. Despite using social media to connect with others, adolescents also view depictions of glamorised SU by both peers and influential figures. Exposure to online alcohol and marijuana content may impact subjective norms (i.e., injunctive and descriptive) ultimately leading to increased offline SU. Data from a multi‐wave project was collected to assess whether subjective norms‐mediated associations between exposure to alcohol and marijuana content by peers and influential figures on Instagram and Snapchat and offline SU.MethodsAt Wave 1, participants were 264 adolescents (Mage = 14.91, 51% female, 86% White, 85% Hispanic/Latino/a/x).ResultsInjunctive norms significantly mediated associations between exposure to alcohol content posted by peers and influential figures on Instagram and Snapchat and offline alcohol use. Injunctive norms significantly mediated associations between exposure to marijuana content posted by peers and influential figures on Instagram, and peers on Snapchat and offline marijuana use. Descriptive norms significantly mediated associations between exposure to alcohol content posted by peers on Instagram, as well as peers and influential figures on Snapchat and offline alcohol use.Discussion and ConclusionIncreased exposure to online SU content was more consistently associated with injunctive norms rather than descriptive norms. Future research should examine which social media features (e.g., the like button) contribute to increased subjective norms. Overall, findings suggest that social media may strongly convey approval of SU behaviours rather than actual use.
Funder
National Center on Minority Health and Health Disparities
National Institute on Drug Abuse
Subject
Health (social science),Medicine (miscellaneous)
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