Review Article

Meta-analysis of the relationship between social media addiction and psychological well-being among university students: A comprehensive review

Begzod K. Khodjaev 1 * , Rasuljon K. Atamuratov 2 , Muslima K. Bozorova 3 , Murodulla K. Ismailov 4 , Sarvinoz M. Norboyeva 3 , Nasiba Z. Sayimbetova 5
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1 Department of Pedagogy, National Pedagogical University of Uzbekistan, Tashkent, UZBEKISTAN2 Department of Computational Linguistics and Digital Technologies, Alisher Navo’i Tashkent State University of Uzbek Language and Literature, Tashkent, UZBEKISTAN3 Department of Pedagogy and Social Work, Termez State University, Termez, UZBEKISTAN4 Department of Pedagogy, Termez State Pedagogical Institute, Termez, UZBEKISTAN5 Department of Building and Structure Construction, Karakalpak State University, Nukus, UZBEKISTAN* Corresponding Author
Online Journal of Communication and Media Technologies, 16(3), July 2026, e202642, https://doi.org/10.30935/ojcmt/18954
Published: 13 July 2026
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ABSTRACT

This meta-analysis synthesizes correlational research on the relationship between social media addiction and psychological well-being among university students. A random effects model, using 62 independent studies (total N = 17,800) covering publications from 2017-2026, identified through systematic searches in the Web of Science, Scopus, and ProQuest databases, yielded an overall combined effect size of r = -0.41 (95% confidence interval [-0.47, -0.35]), indicating a moderate negative association. High heterogeneity (I² = 87.4%) demonstrated the feasibility of systematic moderator analyses examining six variables. Therefore, scale of measurement, cultural context, type of social media platform, presence and type of mediating variables, publication type, and publication year were tested as moderators. Mediating variables particularly sleep quality, self-regulation, and critical thinking significantly strengthened the negative association. Cultural context also emerged as a significant moderator. Studies conducted in a Middle Eastern context yielded the largest effect sizes. Publication year showed a significant trend, with effect sizes steadily increasing over time. Publication bias assessments via funnel plot review, Egger test, and trimming and stuffing procedure showed no significant bias. The findings have practical implications for university consulting services and policymakers tasked with developing targeted digital well-being interventions.

CITATION (APA)

Khodjaev, B. K., Atamuratov, R. K., Bozorova, M. K., Ismailov, M. K., Norboyeva, S. M., & Sayimbetova, N. Z. (2026). Meta-analysis of the relationship between social media addiction and psychological well-being among university students: A comprehensive review. Online Journal of Communication and Media Technologies, 16(3), e202642. https://doi.org/10.30935/ojcmt/18954

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