Placing problematic media use in context: a research synthesis, person-centric framework, and chart review among a clinical sample of US youth.
Michael C Carter, Nicole Powell, Benoit Bediou, Michael Tsappis, David Bickham, Michael Rich
Abstract
Open AccessUnderstanding the dynamics underlying problematic media use (PMU) is crucial in today's digital society. The maintaining factors driving problematic use span both bio-psychological and social factors, necessitating the development of an integrative, meta-theoretical account of PMU to encompass core pathways across established frameworks. The present study used a mixed-methods approach to analyze patient charts (N = 205) from a US clinic specializing in addressing PMU. In doing so, we developed the Person-Context-Process-Outcome-Time (PC-POT) model. PC-POT approaches PMU as a cycle of media-dependent dysfunction. Results suggested that this cycle compounds in severity over time and is maintained by a set of (intrapersonal and interpersonal) situational transitions that can affect patient functioning across five key domains. By providing a heuristic structure that more holistically encompasses core determinants and outcomes of PMU, PC-POT helps to provide a more unified basis to advance understanding of PMU in a person- and process-centric way.