Using Social Media Networks to Engage Men in Conversations on Masculinity and Suicide: Content Analysis of Facebook Campaign Data

We analyzed comments published on the Man Up Facebook page ( manuptvseries ) during the roll-out of the Man Up digital campaign. The aim was to gain insight into how the public perceived the Man Up campaign and the conversation topics that the campaign instigated. We downloaded Facebook threads (pos...

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Main Authors: Marisa Schlichthorst, Kylie King, Lennart Reifels, Andrea Phelps, Jane Pirkis
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2019-11-01
Series:Social Media + Society
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305119880019
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author Marisa Schlichthorst
Kylie King
Lennart Reifels
Andrea Phelps
Jane Pirkis
author_facet Marisa Schlichthorst
Kylie King
Lennart Reifels
Andrea Phelps
Jane Pirkis
author_sort Marisa Schlichthorst
collection DOAJ
description We analyzed comments published on the Man Up Facebook page ( manuptvseries ) during the roll-out of the Man Up digital campaign. The aim was to gain insight into how the public perceived the Man Up campaign and the conversation topics that the campaign instigated. We downloaded Facebook threads (posts and comments) from the manuptvseries page using NCapture and performed conventional content analysis on a random set of comments ( n  = 2,236) to identify how the campaign was perceived and what were the popular conversations. Overall, the campaign was perceived extremely positively by the Facebook audience showing many comments endorsing the content of the campaign by sharing among their Facebook community. The strongest themes were expressing emotions, help and support, and masculinity/gender roles which related to the higher level theme of expressions of masculinity. Another strong theme was suicide and topics related to suicide. Comments acknowledged the importance of discussing the issues of male suicide and masculinity publicly. Men were less engaged with topics on masculinity and expressing emotions compared with women and recognized stigma around help-seeking for mental health issues. The Man Up Facebook campaign did foster a public discussion on masculinity and suicide. A gendered approach in mental health promotion is needed with stigma still present for men when seeking help for mental health problems. Social media holds considerable potential for the use of health promotion campaigns aiming to increase interpersonal communication on challenging health topics. Yet, these campaigns need to carefully manage the risk of reinforcing stereotypes.
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spelling doaj.art-27750b3b82dd4ba68f032238b810a3652022-12-22T00:22:29ZengSAGE PublishingSocial Media + Society2056-30512019-11-01510.1177/2056305119880019Using Social Media Networks to Engage Men in Conversations on Masculinity and Suicide: Content Analysis of Facebook Campaign DataMarisa Schlichthorst0Kylie King1Lennart Reifels2Andrea Phelps3Jane Pirkis4The University of Melbourne, AustraliaThe University of Melbourne, AustraliaThe University of Melbourne, AustraliaPhoenix Australia, Centre for Posttraumatic Mental Health, the University of Melbourne, AustraliaThe University of Melbourne, AustraliaWe analyzed comments published on the Man Up Facebook page ( manuptvseries ) during the roll-out of the Man Up digital campaign. The aim was to gain insight into how the public perceived the Man Up campaign and the conversation topics that the campaign instigated. We downloaded Facebook threads (posts and comments) from the manuptvseries page using NCapture and performed conventional content analysis on a random set of comments ( n  = 2,236) to identify how the campaign was perceived and what were the popular conversations. Overall, the campaign was perceived extremely positively by the Facebook audience showing many comments endorsing the content of the campaign by sharing among their Facebook community. The strongest themes were expressing emotions, help and support, and masculinity/gender roles which related to the higher level theme of expressions of masculinity. Another strong theme was suicide and topics related to suicide. Comments acknowledged the importance of discussing the issues of male suicide and masculinity publicly. Men were less engaged with topics on masculinity and expressing emotions compared with women and recognized stigma around help-seeking for mental health issues. The Man Up Facebook campaign did foster a public discussion on masculinity and suicide. A gendered approach in mental health promotion is needed with stigma still present for men when seeking help for mental health problems. Social media holds considerable potential for the use of health promotion campaigns aiming to increase interpersonal communication on challenging health topics. Yet, these campaigns need to carefully manage the risk of reinforcing stereotypes.https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305119880019
spellingShingle Marisa Schlichthorst
Kylie King
Lennart Reifels
Andrea Phelps
Jane Pirkis
Using Social Media Networks to Engage Men in Conversations on Masculinity and Suicide: Content Analysis of Facebook Campaign Data
Social Media + Society
title Using Social Media Networks to Engage Men in Conversations on Masculinity and Suicide: Content Analysis of Facebook Campaign Data
title_full Using Social Media Networks to Engage Men in Conversations on Masculinity and Suicide: Content Analysis of Facebook Campaign Data
title_fullStr Using Social Media Networks to Engage Men in Conversations on Masculinity and Suicide: Content Analysis of Facebook Campaign Data
title_full_unstemmed Using Social Media Networks to Engage Men in Conversations on Masculinity and Suicide: Content Analysis of Facebook Campaign Data
title_short Using Social Media Networks to Engage Men in Conversations on Masculinity and Suicide: Content Analysis of Facebook Campaign Data
title_sort using social media networks to engage men in conversations on masculinity and suicide content analysis of facebook campaign data
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305119880019
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