Journal of General Education and Humanities
Vol. 4 No. 4 (2025): November

Digital Triggers of Adolescent Anxiety in Oyo Town, Nigeria

Fehintola, Victor Ayodeji (Unknown)
Ogunniyi, Tobi Moses (Unknown)



Article Info

Publish Date
01 Sep 2025

Abstract

Anxiety disorders represent one of the most prevalent mental health challenges among adolescents globally, with significant implications for academic performance, social development, and overall well-being. While extensive research has examined the impact of digital technology on mental health in Western contexts, there remains a critical gap in understanding these relationships in smaller urban centres in Africa. This study addressed this gap by investigating the relationships between social media use intensity, cyberbullying victimisation, online peer support, and anxiety levels among adolescents in Oyo Town, Nigeria. A cross-sectional correlational design was employed with 250 adolescents (mean age=15.2years, SD=1.8;52% female) selected through multistage sampling from four secondary schools across two Local Government Areas. Data were collected using validated instruments: the SMUIS, CVS, OSS, and the SCARED scales. Pearson correlation analysis revealed significant positive correlations between anxiety levels and both social media use intensity (r=0.483,p<.005) and cyberbullying victimisation (r=0.652,p<.005), while online peer support demonstrated a significant protective effect (r=-0.316, p<.001). Multiple regression analysis identified cyberbullying exposure as the strongest predictor of anxiety levels (β=.526,p<.001), followed by social media use intensity (β=.312,p<.001), with online peer support serving as a significant protective factor (β=-.241,p<.001). These digital variables accounted for 64.3% of the variance in adolescent anxiety levels, indicating a substantial influence of digital experiences on youth mental health in this context. The findings underscore the critical need for comprehensive cyberbullying prevention programs and culturally appropriate digital literacy interventions in Nigerian educational settings, while highlighting the potential of online peer support networks as protective mechanisms against adolescent anxiety.

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Journal Info

Abbrev

gehu

Publisher

Subject

Humanities Languange, Linguistic, Communication & Media Mathematics Other

Description

The Journal of General Education and Humanities (GEHU) is a peer-reviewed scholarly online journal. The GEHU is published quarterly in February, May, August, and November. The GEHU is a non-profit journal whose publication is free of charge. The articles should be original, unpublished, and not ...