{"id":19325,"date":"2022-04-20T21:54:19","date_gmt":"2022-04-21T01:54:19","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/marymount.edu\/academics\/?page_id=19325"},"modified":"2024-02-14T15:14:35","modified_gmt":"2024-02-14T20:14:35","slug":"effectiveness-of-mental-health-advocacy-on-twitter-during-mental-health-month-by-b-antonia-delawie","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/marymount.edu\/academics\/college-of-sciences-and-humanities\/school-of-interdisciplinary-studies\/student-publications\/magnificat-2022\/effectiveness-of-mental-health-advocacy-on-twitter\/","title":{"rendered":"“Effectiveness of Mental Health Advocacy on Twitter During Mental Health Month” by B. Antonia Delawie"},"content":{"rendered":"
Magnificat<\/a>, <\/em>April 2022<\/h5>\n

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Abstract<\/h4>\n

Scholarship on the role of social media in mental health advocacy generally agrees that social media plays a big role in mental health advocacy these days. But scholars have yet to extensively explore how effective mental health advocacy on social media really is. This essay addresses this gap in the literature by looking at the correlation between Twitter data and Google searches related to mental health. I demonstrate that there isn\u2019t a significant correlation because there was a slight increase in word usage on Twitter, but Google search data didn’t show any significant increase in the month of May that could have been caused by the Twitter advocacy.<\/p>\n

Introduction<\/h4>\n

Scholars have speculated about the role of social media in mental health advocacy ever since the first emergence of the phenomenon. Social media can seem like a powerful advocacy tool since it gives a voice to the everyday person to get their thoughts out to millions of people. Tweets go viral every single day, but the real question is not about how many people a tweet reaches, but how seeing that tweet affects their behavior. My research aims to provide some insight into this question by looking at the correlation between the frequency of Twitter word usage and the frequency of Google searches related to mental health in Mental Health Awareness Month compared to the rest of the year. This correlation isn\u2019t a certain indicator of people\u2019s behaviors, but it could lend us some interesting insight into the question.<\/p>\n

Research questions and Thesis statement<\/h4>\n

My main research question focuses on the effectiveness of mental health advocacy during Mental Health Awareness month.<\/p>\n