| Literature DB >> 27191728 |
Michele P Dyson1, Lisa Hartling1, Jocelyn Shulhan1, Annabritt Chisholm1, Andrea Milne1, Purnima Sundar2, Shannon D Scott3, Amanda S Newton4.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To conduct a systematic review of studies of social media platforms used by young people to discuss and view deliberate self-harm. STUDYEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27191728 PMCID: PMC4871432 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0155813
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Flow Diagram of Study Selection.
Details of the flow of information through the phases of the systematic review.
Description of included studies (n = 26). Figures are number, percentage unless otherwise stated.
| Country of corresponding author | ||
| Canada | 8 | 30 |
| Israel | 1 | 4 |
| Germany | 1 | 4 |
| Hungary | 1 | 4 |
| Japan | 2 | 8 |
| Sweden | 1 | 4 |
| UK | 8 | 31 |
| USA | 4 | 15 |
| Start date, median year (range) | 2008 (1994–2010) | |
| Duration in days / months, median (range) | 3 months (1 day– 11 months) | |
| Sample size analyzed, median (range) | Participants: 100 (10–9,990) | |
| Online posts: 77 (8–26,100) | ||
| Design | ||
| Cross Sectional | 5 | 19 |
| Descriptive | 9 | 35 |
| Qualitative | 11 | 42 |
| Mixed Methods | 1 | 4 |
| Setting | ||
| University / College | 1 | 4 |
| Online Community | 26 | 100 |
| Social media platform | ||
| Blog | 2 | 8 |
| Bulletin board / discussion forum | 19 | 73 |
| 2 | 8 | |
| Myspace | 2 | 8 |
| YouTube | 4 | 15 |
| Mixi | 1 | 4 |
| Gender, mean % (female / male) | 69 / 27 | |
| Age | ||
| 12–18 years | 15 | 58 |
| 19–21 years | 18 | 69 |
| Not reported | 8 | 31 |
| Ethnicity, mean % | ||
| White | 84 | |
| Black | 9 | |
| Latino / Hispanic | 5 | |
| Other / Not reported | 9 | |
| Pre-existing mental health conditions | ||
| Anxiety / anxiety disorders | 3 | 12 |
| Bipolar disorder | 2 | 8 |
| Depression | 5 | 19 |
| Eating disorder | 1 | 4 |
| Obsessive compulsive disorder | 1 | 4 |
| Panic disorder | 1 | 4 |
| Post-traumatic stress disorder | 1 | 4 |
| Substance use / abuse | 2 | 8 |
a Percentages do not add up to 100% because some studies were conducted in multiple locations.
b Percentages do not add up to 100% because some studies evaluated multiple social media platforms.
Characteristics of studies reporting features of social media platforms used to discuss and view deliberate self-harm acts.
| Author, Publication Date (Country) | Study Design Features | Study Population | Social Media Platform | Key Findings | MMAT Scoring |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cash, 2013[ | Qualitative analysis of online profiles and comments to identify themes related to relationships, mental health and substance use, and method of deliberate self-harm | 1,038 Myspace posts regarding deliberate self-harm | Myspace | - Comments referenced a significant amount of hopelessness, despair and desperation | 100 |
| - Public websites were used to reveal suicidal thoughts, behaviors, and possible intent | |||||
| Smithson, 2011[ | Qualitative analysis of online forum posts to identify site norms and expectations. Posts by individuals who deliberately self-harm and use self-harm discussion forums | Discussion forum (SharpTalk) | - Site norms and expectations were largely created by the participants | 100 | |
| - Requests for advice were often followed by a request for emotional support or empathy | |||||
| - Self-harm was normalized, and users combined perceptions of deliberate self-harm as a routine activity with suggestions on how to be ‘safe’ | |||||
| Rodham, 2007[ | Qualitative analysis of online forum posts to evaluate users’ interactions and identify how they established the function of the message board | 65 posts by users of deliberate self-harm discussion forums | Discussion forum | - Individuals using the message boards considered them to be a significant source of support | 100 |
| - Responses to posts describing harmful behaviors tended to minimize the severity of and normalize self-harm actions | |||||
| Fekete, 2002[ | Descriptive analysis of forum posts to identify the most frequent topics | 382 posts to a suicide-based self-help group | Discussion forum | The most common topics of discussion identified included: asking for and providing support; suicide models, pacts and imitation; suicide methods and information; consequences of suicide | 100 |
| Lewis, 2014[ | Descriptive analysis of health information website data to identify the quality of information regarding deliberate self-harm | 340 websites (including blogs) used by individuals who deliberately self-harm | Blog | Online searches for information on deliberate self-harm were frequent, and often resulted in non-credible and low-quality information containing common myths | 75 |
| Duggan, 2012[ | Descriptive analysis of discussion forums, social media groups, and YouTube videos to identify the scope of deliberate self-harm activities reported online | 20 online platforms used by individuals who deliberately self-harm | Blog, discussion forums, Facebook, Myspace, YouTube | - Peer-led, informal discussion forums were accessed more often than professional forums and contained content that could prompt deliberate self-harm | 75 |
| - Deliberate self-harm is well represented on social networking sites and YouTube | |||||
| Sharkey, 2012[ | Qualitative analysis of online forum posts to identify the nature of online interactions | 77 posts by individuals who deliberately self-harm and use self-harm discussion forums | Discussion forum (SharpTalk) | - Participants demonstrated endearments, encouragement, and solidarity | 75 |
| - Mitigating devices such as indirectness, disclaimers, and hedges, were frequently used to reduce the impact of ‘threatening’ interactions | |||||
| Horne, 2009[ | Qualitative analysis of online forum posts to identify the format and frequency of the initial posts in a discussion thread | 329 posts on suicide discussion boards by users who reported being suicidal or having suicidal feelings | Discussion forum | - The function of the forum was partly to allow individuals to experiment with suicidal identities | 75 |
| - Users demonstrated their authenticity through four techniques: providing detailed personal narratives, presenting themselves as beyond depression, making a rational case for suicide, and not explicitly asking for help | |||||
| Adler, 2008[ | Qualitative analysis of online forum posts and individuals to identify facets of cyber community use | 81 individuals who deliberately self-harm and are users of self-harm discussion boards and online communities | Discussion forum | - Community size, demographics, level of activity, and orientation were considerations in selecting an online community | 75 |
| - Online communities varied in level of regulation, focus, and stance on self-harming behaviors | |||||
| - Finding a community gave participants a sense of identity | |||||
| - Participation in an online community was situational, with users coming and going as they needed support |
a Sample size not reported
b Professionally-driven forum
Potential benefits reported in primarily positive studies regarding the use of social media platforms to discuss and view deliberate self-harm acts.
| Author, Publication Date (Country) | Study Design Features | Study Population | Social Media Platform | Key Findings | MMAT Scoring |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Smithson, 2011[ | Qualitative analysis of online forum posts to identify how individuals become members of online discussion communities | 77 posts by users of discussion forums who deliberately self-harm | Discussion forum (SharpTalk) | - Users felt an obligation to not let others down by engaging in self-harm | 100 |
| - Users felt accepted and a sense of belonging | |||||
| - Forum members were more likely than forum moderators to address perceived deviance in posts and to provide healthcare advice | |||||
| Baker, 2008[ | Qualitative analysis of semi-structured interviews to understand empathetic understanding among users of online self-harm discussion forums | 10 users of deliberate self-harm discussion forums | Discussion forum | - Users found empathetic understanding in the online community | 100 |
| - Online membership afforded a positive identity | |||||
| - Some members used forums as an alternative to deliberate self-harm | |||||
| Miller, 1998[ | Qualitative analysis of online forum posts to identify help-seeking interchanges | 98 users of suicide discussion forums | Discussion forum | - Online exchanges between community members may be superior to psychotherapeutic practices in some instances because they are richer and virtually open-ended | 100 |
| Lewis, 2011[ | Descriptive analysis of posts from personally constructed websites on deliberate self-harm | 71 self-harm discussion forums used by individuals who deliberately self-harm | Discussion forum | - Websites often contained supportive messages for those who deliberately self-harm | 75 |
| Greidanus, 2010[ | Descriptive analysis of online forum posts to identify member experiences and purposes for seeking help | 10 message threads on a discussion forum from users who reported being suicidal | Discussion forum | - Help-seekers felt their experiences were understood and shared by other members | 75 |
| - With time, help-seekers often progressed to providing others with feedback and support |
a Professionally-driven forum
Potential harms reported in primarily negative studies regarding the use of social media platforms to discuss and view deliberate self-harm acts.
| Author, Publication Date (Country) | Study Design Features | Study Population | Social Media Platform | Key Findings | MMAT Scoring |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Masuda, 2013[ | Cross-sectional analysis of online posts to identify factors contributing to membership in suicidal ideation communities | 9,990 online members of suicidal ideation communities | Mixi | - Suicidal ideation was more likely when users belonged to more communities, had a higher proportion of suicidal neighbors in their social network, and were socially isolated | 100 |
| - Age, gender, number of friends contributed little to suicidal ideation | |||||
| Lewis, 2012[ | Qualitative analysis of online responses to the most viewed YouTube videos of deliberate self-harm | 22,311 comments made by viewers of deliberate self-harm videos | YouTube | - Sharing personal experiences was a strong motivator for video viewing | 100 |
| - Responses rarely encouraged or mentioned recovery, and often expressed admiration and validation for the videos, their messages, and the poster, potentially maintaining self-harming behavior | |||||
| Niwa, 2012[ | Qualitative analysis to identify themes in online postings | 998 online posts from participants across four deliberate self-harm Facebook groups | - Exposure to trolling and flaming comments was harmful, leading to a high proportion of antagonistic and defensive posts | 100 | |
| Lewis, 2011[ | Descriptive analysis of posts from personally constructed websites on deliberate self-harm | 71 self-harm discussion forums used by individuals who deliberately self-harm | Discussion forum | - Risks associated with the websites included behavior normalization, reinforcement, and triggering of the behavior, as well as learning additional methods to self-harm | 75 |