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Exploring Substance Use Tweets of Youth in the United States: Mixed Methods Study

BACKGROUND: Substance use by youth remains a significant public health concern. Social media provides the opportunity to discuss and display substance use–related beliefs and behaviors, suggesting that the act of posting drug-related content, or viewing posted content, may influence substance use in...

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Autores principales: Stevens, Robin C, Brawner, Bridgette M, Kranzler, Elissa, Giorgi, Salvatore, Lazarus, Elizabeth, Abera, Maramawit, Huang, Sarah, Ungar, Lyle
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7146240/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32213472
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/16191
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author Stevens, Robin C
Brawner, Bridgette M
Kranzler, Elissa
Giorgi, Salvatore
Lazarus, Elizabeth
Abera, Maramawit
Huang, Sarah
Ungar, Lyle
author_facet Stevens, Robin C
Brawner, Bridgette M
Kranzler, Elissa
Giorgi, Salvatore
Lazarus, Elizabeth
Abera, Maramawit
Huang, Sarah
Ungar, Lyle
author_sort Stevens, Robin C
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Substance use by youth remains a significant public health concern. Social media provides the opportunity to discuss and display substance use–related beliefs and behaviors, suggesting that the act of posting drug-related content, or viewing posted content, may influence substance use in youth. This aligns with empirically supported theories, which posit that behavior is influenced by perceptions of normative behavior. Nevertheless, few studies have explored the content of posts by youth related to substance use. OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to identify the beliefs and behaviors of youth related to substance use by characterizing the content of youths’ drug-related tweets. Using a sequential explanatory mixed methods approach, we sampled drug-relevant tweets and qualitatively examined their content. METHODS: We used natural language processing to determine the frequency of drug-related words in public tweets (from 2011 to 2015) among youth Twitter users geolocated to Pennsylvania. We limited our sample by age (13-24 years), yielding approximately 23 million tweets from 20,112 users. We developed a list of drug-related keywords and phrases and selected a random sample of tweets with the most commonly used keywords to identify themes (n=249). RESULTS: We identified two broad classes of emergent themes: functional themes and relational themes. Functional themes included posts that explicated a function of drugs in one’s life, with subthemes indicative of pride, longing, coping, and reminiscing as they relate to drug use and effects. Relational themes emphasized a relational nature of substance use, capturing substance use as a part of social relationships, with subthemes indicative of drug-related identity and companionship. We also identified topical areas in tweets related to drug use, including reference to polysubstance use, pop culture, and antidrug content. Across the tweets, the themes of pride (63/249, 25.3%) and longing (39/249, 15.7%) were the most popular. Most tweets that expressed pride (46/63, 73%) were explicitly related to marijuana. Nearly half of the tweets on coping (17/36, 47%) were related to prescription drugs. Very few of the tweets contained antidrug content (9/249, 3.6%). CONCLUSIONS: Data integration indicates that drugs are typically discussed in a positive manner, with content largely reflective of functional and relational patterns of use. The dissemination of this information, coupled with the relative absence of antidrug content, may influence youth such that they perceive drug use as normative and justified. Strategies to address the underlying causes of drug use (eg, coping with stressors) and engage antidrug messaging on social media may reduce normative perceptions and associated behaviors among youth. The findings of this study warrant research to further examine the effects of this content on beliefs and behaviors and to identify ways to leverage social media to decrease substance use in this population.
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spelling pubmed-71462402020-04-17 Exploring Substance Use Tweets of Youth in the United States: Mixed Methods Study Stevens, Robin C Brawner, Bridgette M Kranzler, Elissa Giorgi, Salvatore Lazarus, Elizabeth Abera, Maramawit Huang, Sarah Ungar, Lyle JMIR Public Health Surveill Original Paper BACKGROUND: Substance use by youth remains a significant public health concern. Social media provides the opportunity to discuss and display substance use–related beliefs and behaviors, suggesting that the act of posting drug-related content, or viewing posted content, may influence substance use in youth. This aligns with empirically supported theories, which posit that behavior is influenced by perceptions of normative behavior. Nevertheless, few studies have explored the content of posts by youth related to substance use. OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to identify the beliefs and behaviors of youth related to substance use by characterizing the content of youths’ drug-related tweets. Using a sequential explanatory mixed methods approach, we sampled drug-relevant tweets and qualitatively examined their content. METHODS: We used natural language processing to determine the frequency of drug-related words in public tweets (from 2011 to 2015) among youth Twitter users geolocated to Pennsylvania. We limited our sample by age (13-24 years), yielding approximately 23 million tweets from 20,112 users. We developed a list of drug-related keywords and phrases and selected a random sample of tweets with the most commonly used keywords to identify themes (n=249). RESULTS: We identified two broad classes of emergent themes: functional themes and relational themes. Functional themes included posts that explicated a function of drugs in one’s life, with subthemes indicative of pride, longing, coping, and reminiscing as they relate to drug use and effects. Relational themes emphasized a relational nature of substance use, capturing substance use as a part of social relationships, with subthemes indicative of drug-related identity and companionship. We also identified topical areas in tweets related to drug use, including reference to polysubstance use, pop culture, and antidrug content. Across the tweets, the themes of pride (63/249, 25.3%) and longing (39/249, 15.7%) were the most popular. Most tweets that expressed pride (46/63, 73%) were explicitly related to marijuana. Nearly half of the tweets on coping (17/36, 47%) were related to prescription drugs. Very few of the tweets contained antidrug content (9/249, 3.6%). CONCLUSIONS: Data integration indicates that drugs are typically discussed in a positive manner, with content largely reflective of functional and relational patterns of use. The dissemination of this information, coupled with the relative absence of antidrug content, may influence youth such that they perceive drug use as normative and justified. Strategies to address the underlying causes of drug use (eg, coping with stressors) and engage antidrug messaging on social media may reduce normative perceptions and associated behaviors among youth. The findings of this study warrant research to further examine the effects of this content on beliefs and behaviors and to identify ways to leverage social media to decrease substance use in this population. JMIR Publications 2020-03-26 /pmc/articles/PMC7146240/ /pubmed/32213472 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/16191 Text en ©Robin C Stevens, Bridgette M Brawner, Elissa Kranzler, Salvatore Giorgi, Elizabeth Lazarus, Maramawit Abera, Sarah Huang, Lyle Ungar. Originally published in JMIR Public Health and Surveillance (http://publichealth.jmir.org), 26.03.2020. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in JMIR Public Health and Surveillance, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on http://publichealth.jmir.org, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Original Paper
Stevens, Robin C
Brawner, Bridgette M
Kranzler, Elissa
Giorgi, Salvatore
Lazarus, Elizabeth
Abera, Maramawit
Huang, Sarah
Ungar, Lyle
Exploring Substance Use Tweets of Youth in the United States: Mixed Methods Study
title Exploring Substance Use Tweets of Youth in the United States: Mixed Methods Study
title_full Exploring Substance Use Tweets of Youth in the United States: Mixed Methods Study
title_fullStr Exploring Substance Use Tweets of Youth in the United States: Mixed Methods Study
title_full_unstemmed Exploring Substance Use Tweets of Youth in the United States: Mixed Methods Study
title_short Exploring Substance Use Tweets of Youth in the United States: Mixed Methods Study
title_sort exploring substance use tweets of youth in the united states: mixed methods study
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7146240/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32213472
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/16191
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