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Sex & social media: How to talk to young people about sexual health

  • Social media’s increasing presence in Africa offers a new way to reach young people and promote safe sexual behaviour.
  • Young people are more likely to engage with sexual health information on Facebook and WhatsApp, but only in a superficial manner.
  • The key to successful messaging is to move away from fear tactics around STIs, HIV and pregnancy and integrating visuals into the information.

The increasing use of social media, particularly in African countries, offers several opportunities to promote messages about sexual health behaviours among young adults on the continent.

It can complement existing sexual health promotion strategies, particularly when physical distancing measures limit opportunities to meet and interact in person. In addition, the fact that social media platforms allow for multi-directional communication opens new possibilities.

Young people don’t just need to be passive consumers of sexual health information. They can also actively engage on sexual health issues in their private space at a time convenient for them.

But are these opportunities being used?

Using social media to talk about sexual health

We analysed 3 533 peer-generated sexual and reproductive health messages to find out. The posts were shared on a public Facebook group by and for young African adults between 1 June 2018 and 31 May 2019. We also independently classified the posts into categories such as topic, strategy and tone of communication. Our aim was to understand the unique features associated with higher engagement with peer-generated sexual health information.

We concluded that strategies to help young people make informed decisions about their sexuality needs to increase access to – and interaction with – sexuality information on platforms. But we found that invoking fear and issuing threats don’t work.

Social media platforms like Facebook and WhatsApp are the most preferred digital platform for accessing sexual health information among young adults who participated in an earlier survey we did.

But several sexual health interventions on social media across Africa and globally have reported low levels of interaction – in part because of the sensitivity of sexuality issues. Despite this, high levels of interaction and propagation of sexual health information on social media are crucial to increasing information reach.

Engagement metrics such as reactions (favourites), comments (replies) and shares (retweets) are used by social media platforms, including Facebook’s algorithm to determine information reach. These metrics determine which social media content is seen by users and those in their networks.

What not to do: Stigma and shame won’t lead to safe sex

Our analysis found that young people were more likely to superficially interact with sexual health information. This is done through likes rather than leaving comments or sharing posts.

We also observed a dominance of precautionary voices and a language of consequence. In these cases young people were advised to abstain from sexual activity or “face consequences” of HIV infection, sexually transmitted infections and pregnancy.

Close to a quarter of all the posts evoked fear, stigma, or guilt. The use of fear, guilt or shame tactics was particularly common among posts focusing on abortion or birth control methods (52%) as well as sexual abstinence (41%) or purity messages (33%).

This post talks to the issue of stigma:

If you are not a virgin on your wedding day, you are not supposed to hold a bouquet because you are no longer a virgin. Holding a flower is a symbol of virginity.

This one to fear:

Dear boys and girls, condoms may protect you from sexually transmitted diseases but not from Spiritual Transmitted Demons (STDs).

The pattern of fear, shame and blame tactics observed in our study is of particular concern. Ideally, young people should be key for delivering comprehensive and less threatening sexuality information to their peers. But we found that they were reinforcing existing dominant binary gender roles, norms and moralistic positions on young people’s sexuality.

Messages with fear or guilt appeals received a significantly lower number of reactions compared to neutral messages. Messages that evoked fear also received a significantly fewer number of comments compared to neutral messages.

The role of fear, guilt and stigma appeals in behavioural change has yielded mixed findings in previous studies. Young people are unlikely to seek out information on reducing their risk or testing for HIV when inundated with fear. Some scholars have also found that sexual health interventions that emphasise ‘risk’ over ‘desire’ and ‘shame’ over ‘pleasure’ risk speaking to no one, especially young people whose bodies and experiences tell them otherwise.

Multimedia messaging: Why youths respond more to visuals

We also found support for the use of rich message features such as the combination of education with multimedia and storytelling in increasing engagements. Young people in our study were more likely to interact with messages with visual or multimedia content but less likely to interact with messages with links. They were also more likely to leave a comment, share or like posts that leveraged a storytelling strategy than regular status updates.

These findings demonstrate the potency of videos particularly given the rapid rise of social video platforms like TikTok and Instagram.

These findings provide valuable insight into the ways that young people interact with peer-generated sexual health information. They also pave the way for the design of useful, engaging, and context-specific sexual health information that uses features that have a high appeal for young African adults.

The combination of rich messaging features and less precautionary voice has the potential to increase the reach of sexual health promotion on social media. Such effective use of social media platforms also has the potential to empower young people and challenge dominant misconceptions that impede progress.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons licence. Read the original article

The Conversation

Emmanuel Olamijuwon is a research fellow at the University of St Andrews.

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