TY - JOUR
T1 - Glow up
T2 - does a professional photoshoot intervention affect self-esteem and emotions among adolescent psychiatric patients?-A longitudinal intervention study
AU - Winds, Kornelius
AU - Marka, Theresa
AU - Salcher, Bernhard
AU - Rieser, Nicole
AU - Skrivanek, Christine
AU - Hochrainer, Michelle
AU - Trost-Schrems, Julia
AU - Rainer, Lucas J
AU - Hitzl, Wolfgang
AU - Augner, Christoph
AU - Plattner, Belinda
N1 - Winds, Marka, Rieser, Trost-Schrems, Rainer, Plattner: University Clinics for Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Psychotherapeutic Medicine, Salzburger Landeskliniken, Paracelsus Medical University, Salzburg, Austria; Skrivanek, Rainer, Augner: University Clinics for Psychiatry,
Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics, Salzburger Landeskliniken, Paracelsus Medical University,
Salzburg, Austria; Hochrainer: University Clinics for Pediatrics, Paracelsus Medical University, Salzburg, Austria; Rainer: University Clinics for Neurology, Salzburger Landeskliniken, Paracelsus Medical University, Salzburg, Austria; Hitzl: Research Office Biostatistics, Paracelsus Medical University, Salzburg, Austria; Augner: Institute for Human Resources Research in Health Care, Salzburger Landeskliniken, Paracelsus Medical University, Salzburg, Austria
PY - 2024/2/23
Y1 - 2024/2/23
N2 - BACKGROUND: Today, online communication is shaped by a billion-dollar social media (SM) and social networking site (SNS) industry. Visual content consumed by children and adolescents has been shown to influence behavioral patterns, state emotions, and self-esteem (SE). In this study, we introduced a novel intervention creating visual content through a professional photoshoot and investigated its impact on state emotions and SE in child and adolescent psychiatric (CAP) patients.METHODS: Standardized and validated self-rating questionnaires were used to assess SE, state emotions, coping mechanisms, psychopathological symptoms, and internet use behavior at baseline. SE and state emotions were monitored at different time points around a professional photoshoot within 45 CAP patients (30 female patients; mean age, 15.1 years) using a longitudinal design.RESULTS: Within-subject repeated-measures ANOVA and bootstrapped paired-sample
t-tests showed a significant fluctuation in state emotions and SE throughout the intervention. Spearman correlations and univariate logistic regressions revealed that internalizing symptomatology and maladaptive coping significantly worsened the outcome of the intervention on state emotions and SE in girls. Internet-related variables heightened the positive effect of the intervention in boys and lowered SE in girls during the intervention.
CONCLUSION: The photo intervention had various gender-specific effects. Boys did benefit from the intervention in terms of longitudinal outcome on positive state emotions (PE) and SE, even positively influenced by SNS and SM. Thus, it might be concluded that online social comparison was processed more beneficial in boys. In contrast, when working with visual content in girls, psychopathology and coping must be considered. Internet consumption in general, especially SM and SNS, was related to low SE in girls. Nevertheless, when therapeutically accompanied, the "glow up moment" during the shoot (high on PE and SE; low on negative state emotions) could be used as an index moment for therapeutic reflection.
AB - BACKGROUND: Today, online communication is shaped by a billion-dollar social media (SM) and social networking site (SNS) industry. Visual content consumed by children and adolescents has been shown to influence behavioral patterns, state emotions, and self-esteem (SE). In this study, we introduced a novel intervention creating visual content through a professional photoshoot and investigated its impact on state emotions and SE in child and adolescent psychiatric (CAP) patients.METHODS: Standardized and validated self-rating questionnaires were used to assess SE, state emotions, coping mechanisms, psychopathological symptoms, and internet use behavior at baseline. SE and state emotions were monitored at different time points around a professional photoshoot within 45 CAP patients (30 female patients; mean age, 15.1 years) using a longitudinal design.RESULTS: Within-subject repeated-measures ANOVA and bootstrapped paired-sample
t-tests showed a significant fluctuation in state emotions and SE throughout the intervention. Spearman correlations and univariate logistic regressions revealed that internalizing symptomatology and maladaptive coping significantly worsened the outcome of the intervention on state emotions and SE in girls. Internet-related variables heightened the positive effect of the intervention in boys and lowered SE in girls during the intervention.
CONCLUSION: The photo intervention had various gender-specific effects. Boys did benefit from the intervention in terms of longitudinal outcome on positive state emotions (PE) and SE, even positively influenced by SNS and SM. Thus, it might be concluded that online social comparison was processed more beneficial in boys. In contrast, when working with visual content in girls, psychopathology and coping must be considered. Internet consumption in general, especially SM and SNS, was related to low SE in girls. Nevertheless, when therapeutically accompanied, the "glow up moment" during the shoot (high on PE and SE; low on negative state emotions) could be used as an index moment for therapeutic reflection.
KW - Children and adolescent psychiatry
KW - Gender differences
KW - Photo intervention
KW - Self-esteem
KW - Social media
KW - Social networking sites
KW - State emotions
U2 - 10.3389/fpsyt.2024.1310252
DO - 10.3389/fpsyt.2024.1310252
M3 - Original Article
C2 - 38463433
SN - 1664-0640
VL - 15
SP - 1310252
JO - FRONTIERS IN PSYCHIATRY
JF - FRONTIERS IN PSYCHIATRY
M1 - 1310252
ER -