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Journal Article

Citation

Carlyle KE, Guidry JPD, Dougherty SA, Burton CW. Health Educ. Behav. 2019; 46(Suppl 2): 90-96.

Affiliation

University of California Irvine, Irvine, CA, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/1090198119873917

PMID

31742450

Abstract

Social media platforms like Instagram are often used as venues for discussing relationships, making them ideal channels for promoting healthy relationships and preventing intimate partner violence (IPV). This is particularly relevant for IPV, which has been historically understood as a personal issue and lacked support for consideration as a significant public health issue. To explore a potential platform for IPV prevention, this study examines the ways in which IPV messages on Instagram reflect public health understandings of, and approaches to, prevention and how Instagram users engage with these posts. We analyzed 700 Instagram posts about IPV using the social ecological model as the theoretical framework for conceptualizing framing devices. Posts that mentioned individual causal attribution and individual solution responsibility were both present in the majority of posts and elicited more engagement than posts that did not. Encouragingly, the Instagram sample was more reflective of a range of different types of IPV experiences than previous analyses of traditional media content, possibly indicating that a public health approach to this issue is gaining traction.


Language: en

Keywords

e-health; health communications; quantitative methods; social ecological model; social media; theories; violence and victimization

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