Are active and passive social media use related to
mental health, wellbeing, and social support outcomes?
A meta-analysis of 141 studies

Dublin Core

Title

Are active and passive social media use related to
mental health, wellbeing, and social support outcomes?
A meta-analysis of 141 studies

Subject

active social media use, passive social media use, wellbeing, illbeing, social support

Description

The relationships between active (e.g., creating content) and passive (e.g., scrolling) social media (SM) use (SMU) and mental health, wellbeing,
and social support outcomes have received significant attention, yet findings have been mixed. We conducted a meta-analysis of 141 studies
(N � 145,000) containing 897 effect sizes (ESs) between active and passive SMU and 13 outcomes. Most ESs were negligible (jrj < .10), with
the exception of between-person associations for active SMU and greater online support (r 1⁄4 .34), wellbeing (r 1⁄4 .15), positive affect (r 1⁄4 .11),

and symptoms of anxiety (r 1⁄4 .12), and passive SMU and greater online support (r 1⁄4 .15). Moderator analyses revealed that passive use was as-
sociated with worse emotional outcomes in general SM contexts, but not in the context of SM groups. User age also emerged as an important

contextual factor. Implications for future research, theory development, and healthy SMU are discussed.

Creator

Rebecca Godard 1,�, Susan Holtzman

Source

https://doi.org/10.1093/jcmc/zmad055

Date

11 December 2023

Contributor

PERI IRAWAN

Format

PDF

Language

ENGLISH

Type

TEXT

Files

Collection

Citation

Rebecca Godard 1,�, Susan Holtzman, “Are active and passive social media use related to
mental health, wellbeing, and social support outcomes?
A meta-analysis of 141 studies,” Repository Horizon University Indonesia, accessed May 23, 2025, https://repository.horizon.ac.id/items/show/8774.