Litcius/Paper detail

Health Information Sharing via Social Network Sites (SNSs): Integrating Social Support and Socioemotional Selectivity Theory

Jian Raymond Rui

2022Health Communication21 citationsDOI

Abstract

Despite its prevalence, research on health information sharing via social network sites (SNSs) is mostly descriptive and often lacks a coherent theoretical framework. By integrating social support and socioemotional selectivity theory, the present study takes a uses and gratifications approach to examining what factors affected health information sharing via WeChat, the most widely used SNS in China. Results of an online survey (N = 519) show that emotional and informational support provisions both predicted health information sharing via WeChat. In addition, age moderated the effects of both support provision. While the relationship between emotional support provision and health information sharing was stronger among older adults, the effect of informational support provision was marginally significantly stronger among younger adults. These findings provide additional understanding of health information sharing via SNSs by revealing its emotional meaning and demonstrating different sharing motivations in different age groups, which offers implications on health information design, dissemination, and discussions in different groups.

Topics & Concepts

Socioemotional selectivity theoryInformation sharingPsychologySocial supportHealth informationEmotional supportSocial network (sociolinguistics)Meaning (existential)Social psychologyAffect (linguistics)Health communicationSocial mediaDevelopmental psychologyComputer scienceHealth careWorld Wide WebPolitical scienceCommunicationPsychotherapistLawHealth Literacy and Information AccessibilityTechnology Use by Older AdultsImpact of Technology on Adolescents