Overview
Social media refers to internet-based platforms and applications that enable users to create, share and interact with user-generated content and to form networked communities through text, images and video. As a pervasive feature of contemporary life, social media shapes communication, identity, information exchange and social comparison, and has become an important variable in psychological and public health research. Its use is studied both as a determinant of mental health and behaviour, through associations with body image, anxiety, depression, sleep, loneliness and health-related fixation, and as a tool for health promotion, recruitment, surveillance and the dissemination of information and misinformation. Mechanistically, engagement with social media interacts with reward processing, social comparison and reinforcement, with effects that vary by age, content and pattern of use. The peer-reviewed studies gathered here reflect these applications, examining whether social media contributes to unhealthy preoccupation with health, links between social media exposure and adolescent overweight, women's experiences after miscarriage across multiple platforms, recruitment strategies for prevention research, vaccine hesitancy, loneliness and bedtime procrastination, and behavioural change in tobacco control, illustrating how social media functions as both an object of study and a medium for intervention in clinical, behavioural and public health contexts.
Research published in this journal
12 peer-reviewed articles, ranked by relevance. Each links to its DOI.
Childhood Overweight, Social Media, and Osteoarthritis: Is there a Possible Emergent, yet Unrecognized Linkage?
The 2020 Presidential Election and Should Social Media Laws that Affect the Outcome of Intellectual Property Laws Be Dramatically Changed?
An updated review: women's concerns following miscarriage on multiple social media platforms
Psychosocial Interventions in Bipolar Disorder
Recruitment Strategies and Challenges in a Pilot HIV Prevention Study among Cisgender Black Women in Houston, Texas
Predictors of COVID-19 Vaccine Hesitancy in North-Central Nigeria
Loneliness and Bedtime Procrastination: Exploring a Model of Interconnectedness Among Young Adults in Germany
Building on Success in Tobacco Control: A Roadmap Towards Tobacco-Free Oman (Perspective Review)
Should an Online Blogger Be Protected by the Illinois Reporter’s Privilege?
An Assessment of The Knowledge, Risk Perception and Attitudes of Healthcare Workers in A Tertiary Health Facility in Southwest Nigeria to The Covid 19 Pandemic
Addressing an Overlooked Population: The Role of Discrimination and Violence in Depression Among South Asian Female College Students
How this research is being cited
The 12 articles above have been cited 10 times in the scholarly literature. Citation data via OpenAlex and Crossref, updated Jun 2026.
-
2026 · BMJ Open Quality
-
2025 · Tobacco Prevention & Cessation
-
2025 · Tobacco Prevention & Cessation
-
2025 · Frontiers
-
2025 · AJOG Global Reports
-
2025 · AJOG Global Reports
-
Moderating Effect of Smartphone Use Between Loneliness and Bedtime Procrastination Among Adolescents2025 · Journal of Interdisciplinary Perspectives
-
Moderating Effect of Smartphone Use Between Loneliness and Bedtime Procrastination Among Adolescents2025 · Journal of interdisciplinary perspectives
A sample of recent works citing this journal's research on Social Media, linking to each citing work.