Abstract
Objective
Assess Instagram use for mental health disclosure in university students to assess the potential for Instagram use as mental health support-seeking.
Participants
Twenty-one students using mental health services while attending a private, Mid-Atlantic university between 6/2017-12/2017.
Methods
Collected qualitative interview and Instagram data and analyzed them in parallel. Instagram data supplemented interview themes and were coded and analyzed quantitatively to define features of participants’ Instagram use.
Results
Participants displayed aversions to posting mental health disclosures on Instagram, citing public and self-stigma as barriers to disclosure. Despite this, participants reported instances in which their Instagram posts directly or indirectly reflected their lived experiences. Some also maintained second anonymous accounts for fuller disclosure.
Conclusions
Given the benefits of mental health disclosures to well-being and the predilection for social media use in university students, student and university-led initiatives to promote social media environments conducive to disclosures could have widespread mental health benefits.
Acknowledgments
Incentives provided by Drexel University Dornsife School of Public Health dissertation funding scholarship. Thank you to Dr. Paul Furtaw for facilitating study recruitment.
Conflict of interest disclosure
The authors have no conflicts of interest to report. The authors confirm that the research presented in this article met the ethical guidelines, including adherence to the legal requirements, of the United States of America and received approval from the Institutional Review Board of Drexel University.
Funding
Incentives provided by Drexel University Dornsife School of Public Health dissertation funding scholarship.