PLoS ONE (Jan 2023)

The importance of trust in the relation between COVID-19 information from social media and well-being among adolescents and young adults.

  • Adam J Hoffman,
  • Luke McGuire,
  • Channing J Mathews,
  • Angelina Joy,
  • Fidelia Law,
  • Marc Drews,
  • Adam Rutland,
  • Adam Hartstone-Rose,
  • Mark Winterbottom,
  • Kelly Lynn Mulvey

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0282076
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 3
p. e0282076

Abstract

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During the COVID-19 pandemic, young people have been exposed to distressing content about COVID-19 without knowing whether they can trust such content. This indicates a need to examine the effects of social media use on mental health and well-being. Existing research provides an inconsistent impression of such effects. Thus, we examined the relation between exposure to COVID-19 information on social media and well-being and assessed if trust in COVID-19 information on social media moderated this relationship. The sample consisted of 168 adolescents and young adults from the U.K. and U.S. (Mage = 17.4 years). Participants completed measures of exposure to, and trust in, COVID-19 information on social media platforms, and measures of emotional, psychological, and social well-being. Results revealed a null to positive relation between exposure to COVID-19 information on social media and well-being across measures. However, when trust was added to the models as a moderator, results indicated that, for adolescents with higher levels of trust in COVID-19 information found on social media, the relation between information encountered on social media and well-being was positive. In contrast, for adolescents with lower levels of trust, the association between information encountered on social media and well-being was null or sometimes negative. Given the lack of consensus about the impact of social media use on well-being, these results point to the importance of trust when assessing the relationship between exposure to COVID-19 information and well-being.