Social media for public health : reaping the benefits, the harms

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Date

Authors

Jafar, Zain
Quick, Jonathan D.
Larson, Heidi J.
Venegas-Vera, Verner
Napoli, Philip
Musuka, Godfrey
Dzinamarira, Tafadzwa
Meena, Kolar Sridara
Kanmani, T. Raju
Rimanyi, Eszter

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Tabriz University of Medical Sciences

Abstract

With more than 4.26 billion social media users worldwide, social media has become a primary source of health information, exchange, and influence. As its use has rapidly expanded, social media has proven to be a “doubled-edged sword,” with considerable benefits as well as notable harms. It can be used to encourage preventive behaviors, foster social connectivity for better mental health, enable health officials to deliver timely information, and connect individuals to reliable information. But social media also has contributed to public health crises by exacerbating a decline in public trust, deteriorating mental health (especially in young people), and spreading dangerous misinformation. These realities have profound implications for health professionals, social media companies, governments, and users. We discuss promising guidelines, digital safety practices, and regulations on which to build a comprehensive approach to healthy use of social media. Concerted efforts from social media companies, governments, users, public interest groups, and academia are essential to mitigate the harms and unlock the benefits of this powerful new technology.

Description

Keywords

Health communication, Mental health, Pandemics, Public health, Social media, SDG-03: Good health and well-being

Sustainable Development Goals

SDG-03:Good heatlh and well-being

Citation

Jafar, Z., Quick, J.D., Larson, H.J. et al. 2023, 'Social media for public health: Reaping the benefits, mitigating the harms', Health Promotion Perspectives, vol. 13, no. 2, pp. 105111. DOI: 10.34172/hpp.2023.13.