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Original Article

Mental illness and bipolar disorder on Twitter: implications for stigma and social support

ORCID Icon, , , , &
Pages 191-199 | Received 12 Jul 2019, Accepted 25 Sep 2019, Published online: 07 Nov 2019
 

Abstract

Background: Mental illness (MI), and particularly, bipolar disorder (BD), are highly stigmatized. However, it is unknown if this stigma is also represented on social media.

Aims: Characterize Twitter-based stigma and social support messaging (“tweets”) about mental health/illness (MH)/MI and BD and determine which tweets garnered retweets.

Methods: We collected tweets about MH/MI and BD during a three-month period and analyzed tweets from dates with the most tweets (“spikes”), an indicator of topic interest. A sample was manually content analyzed, and the remainder were classified using machine learning (logistic regression) by topic, stigma, and social support messaging. We compared stigma and support toward MH/MI versus BD and used logistic regression to quantify tweet features associated with retweets, to assess tweet reach.

Results: Of the 1,270,902 tweets analyzed, 94.7% discussed MH/MI and 5.3% discussed BD. Spikes coincided with a celebrity’s death and a MH awareness campaign. Although the sample contained more support than stigma messaging, BD tweets contained more stigma and less support than MH/MI tweets. However, stigma messaging was infrequently retweeted, and users often retweeted personal MH experiences.

Conclusions: These findings demonstrate opportunities for social media advocacy to reduce stigma and increase displays of social support towards people living with BD.

Disclosure statement

There are no financial supports or relationships that present a conflict of interest.

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