Probing the Coping Processes Between Social Media (WhatsApp) Addiction and Mental Health During Social Distancing

Authors

  • Adil S. Al-Busaidi Sultan Qaboos University
  • Victoria Dauletova Sultan Qaboos University
  • Jean Claude Kwitonda Howard University

Keywords:

depression, social media addiction, communication competence, social capital, COVID-19

Abstract

This study examines the coping processes between social media addiction and mental health among college students during the COVID-19 pandemic. Following the problematic Internet use framework, structural equation modeling (SEM) results support the hypothesized positive associations between social media addiction and psychological distress outcomes. However, latent interaction analysis shows that not all individuals are impacted similarly because the intensity and significance of the mentioned associations changed as a function of computer-medicated communication (CMC) competence. In some cases, communication effectiveness attenuated the relationship between social media addiction and social anxiety symptoms. Together, the findings from this study and previous research support calls for CMC skills training, advocacy, and social support campaigns, particularly for and among subgroups of college students with social and relational skills deficits that put them at a greater risk of mental health prognosis.

Author Biographies

Adil S. Al-Busaidi, Sultan Qaboos University

Assistant professor of organizational communication and director of the innovation and technology transfer center at Sultan Qaboos University

Victoria Dauletova, Sultan Qaboos University

Assistant professor in the Department of Business Communication

Jean Claude Kwitonda, Howard University

Assistant professor in the Department of Strategic Legal and Management Communication in the Cathy Hughes School of Communications

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Published

2023-05-14

Issue

Section

Articles