WhatsApp's Influence on Social Relationships of Older Adults
Veronika Hämmerle, Cora Pauli, Rhea Braunwalder and Sabina Misoch
Institute for Ageing Research, University of Applied Sciences FHS St. Gallen, Rosenbergstrasse 59, St. Gallen, Switzerland
Keywords: Mobile Instant Messaging, WhatsApp, Older Adults, Social Relationships, Digital Divide.
Abstract: Ageing societies and digitalisation are two prominent topics in industrialised nations. This also applies to
Switzerland, where the share of older adults using smartphones and instant messaging services is constantly
rising. The effects of instant messaging services in terms of social needs have been studied mainly regarding
younger and middle-aged adults. According to socioemotional selectivity theory, however, older adults have
different motivations and needs regarding their social relationships. Therefore, the results of studies on
younger population groups cannot be transferred to older population groups. To bridge this research gap, we
conducted a qualitative study with 30 older adults (65+) in Switzerland. We investigated the effects of using
WhatsApp on their subjectively perceived quality of social relationships and examined whether the
socioemotional selectivity theory is still valid in the face of digital communication. We conclude that using
WhatsApp is in line with the socioemotional selectivity theory and has an intensifying effect on social
relations of older users. WhatsApp is used very consciously to achieve positive ends by allowing older users
to select and invest time in meaningful relationships.
1 INTRODUCTION
Digitalisation and ageing societies are two prominent
topics in industrialised nations today. In Switzerland,
instant messaging services, offering online
communication with text, video and audio functions,
are wide-spread and more and more older adults use
mobile internet and smartphones (Y&R Group
Switzerland, 2017).
In this paper, based on a qualitative study
conducted in 2019, we consider how using the instant
messaging service WhatsApp impacts the subjective
perceived quality of social ties of older adults aged
65+ in Switzerland.
The effects of instant messaging services on
social relationships have been studied mainly
regarding young adults. However, according to the
socioemotional selectivity theory (Carstensen, Fung,
& Charles, 2003), motivations in constructing social
relationships change throughout the life span. Thus,
these results do not apply to older adults.
In this paper, we examine whether the
socioemotional selectivity theory remains valid in the
face of digital communication services and more
precisely how the instant messaging service
WhatsApp is used for selection processes described
in the theory. After briefly describing the context and
theoretical background we present preliminary results
of our qualitative study on the subjective influence of
WhatsApp on social relationships of older adults. In
the discussion, we consider limitations and draw
further conclusions from our findings. Our data
shows that WhatsApp has a positive effect on the
subjective experience of the relationships of older
adults. We reflect on how this has implications
regarding debates on social inclusion, exclusion and
participation of older adults in the digitalised age.
2 BACKGROUND
The Swiss Federal Council sees digitalisation as an
opportunity for the Swiss society and has set itself the
goal to ensure the participation of the whole society
in information and communication technology
(Bundesamt für Statistik, 2017). Studies show that
there still is a difference in adoption and use of the
internet depending on age, older adults using digital
services less than their younger counterparts
(Friemel, 2016; Just, Latzer, Metrevelli, & Saurwein,
2013; Seifert & Doh, 2016; Seifert & Schelling,
2015). In literature, this gap is called the “digital
divide”. However, recent studies show that the
number of older adults using the internet is on the rise
Hämmerle, V., Pauli, C., Braunwalder, R. and Misoch, S.
WhatsApp’s Influence on Social Relationships of Older Adults.
DOI: 10.5220/0009470100930098
In Proceedings of the 6th International Conference on Information and Communication Technologies for Ageing Well and e-Health (ICT4AWE 2020), pages 93-98
ISBN: 978-989-758-420-6
Copyright
c
2020 by SCITEPRESS – Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
93
(Seifert & Doh, 2016) and thus the question can be
asked if the digital divide has “grown old” (Friemel,
2016).
We concentrate on the use of the instant
messaging service WhatsApp by older people, as
according to data on Switzerland, WhatsApp was the
most popular App installed on smartphones in
Switzerland in 2017 (Y&R Group Switzerland,
2017). Various studies examine how, why and to
which extent people use smartphones and instant
messaging services. Ariel et al. found that the main
motivation for young Israeli adults to use their
smartphone was the wish to socialize with family and
friends, especially contacts living further away (Ariel,
Elisha-Malka, Avidar, & Levy, 2017). In their study
on the needs that Facebook and WhatsApp fulfil,
Karapanos, Teixeira and Gouveia (2016) found that
for their participants, aged on average 27, the need to
feel related to other people was decisive in the
frequency of use of WhatsApp, demonstrating how
WhatsApp allowed geographically distant family
members to be present or offer reassurance (ibid.).
However, we found that studies on the use of instant
messaging mainly focus on young adults and adults
and that there is a research gap on how older adults
use instant messaging services and the effect they
have on their social relationships.
The importance of considering age in research on
smartphone usage is emphasised by Rosales and
Fernández-Ardèvol in their study on smartphone
usage of older adults in Spain (Rosales & Fernández-
Ardèvol, 2016). They state as that needs and values
change in the course of the lifetime and as social
norms influence ageing, the dimension of age should
be considered in studies (ibid.).
According to the socioemotional selectivity
theory, priorities set in the maintenance of social
relationships differ according to the amount of time
an individual believes he or she has left to live
(Carstensen, Fung, & Charles, 2003). Since time is
perceived as more limited with increasing age, older
adults mainly invest their cognitive and social
resources in emotionally rewarding (inter)actions
(Carstensen & Mikels, 2005; Barber, Opitz, Martins,
Sakaki, & Mather, 2016; Lang, Staudinger, &
Carstensen, 1998). This strategy allows them to
achieve as much emotional gratification as possible in
their remaining lifetime. Older adults focus on the
quality of a fewer number of close relationships and
are better at regulating emotions in everyday life
(Carstensen, Fung, & Charles, 2003). Thus, the
results of the aforementioned studies cannot be
transferred to older adults without consideration and
there is a gap in research concerning older users of
instant messaging.
We examine the use of WhatsApp of people aged
65 and over in Switzerland in detail. Although we do
not deny the danger of older adults being excluded
from society by digitalisation, contrary to Friemel
(2016), we believe that speaking of a “digital divide”
is “growing old”. We focus on those individuals who
do participate in digitalisation to find out how they
appropriate digital means in their constitution of
social relationships and which effect WhatsApp has
on the subjective experience of social relations of
people over 65 in Switzerland.
3 STUDY
To support our position, we use first insights from our
qualitative and explorative study “Instant messaging
and social relationships: Effects of using WhatsApp
on the subjective quality of social relationships of
people 65+” funded by the Swiss National Science
Foundation and currently in the phase of analysis.
Data collection was based on two methodological
elements: the creation of ego-centered network maps,
situating all social contacts of the informant within
three concentric circles from close to distant (Kahn &
Antonucci, 1980), and qualitative, semi-structured
face-to-face interviews. The interviews focused on
the content, frequency and form of messages
exchanged over WhatsApp, the history of use,
advantages and disadvantages concerning WhatsApp
and the subjective experienced effects of WhatsApp
on social relations. We also asked for
misunderstandings and topics our informants would
not discuss via WhatsApp. All interviews were audio-
recorded and fully transcribed. The data is currently
being analysed by qualitative content analysis
(Mayring, 2015). After project completion, the
anonymized transcriptions of the interviews will be
made accessible through a data repository of our
choice.
Our sample consisted of 15 men and 15 women
aged between 66 and 84 (average age: 72.5). One-
third had followed schooling up to secondary
education, two-thirds had completed tertiary
education. We included people with (22) and without
children (8) and grand-children (19 with
grandchildren, 11 without grandchildren) and living
alone (9) or with their spouses/partners (21).
Participants were required to be over 65 years of age,
German-speaking and to have used WhatsApp within
the last three months.
ICT4AWE 2020 - 6th International Conference on Information and Communication Technologies for Ageing Well and e-Health
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4 PRELIMINARY FINDINGS
Our data shows that using WhatsApp has a positive
effect on the constitution and the subjective
perception of the social relationships of older adults.
In this section, we describe data that acts as evidence
to this, focusing on aspects such as upholding social
relationships, intensifying social relationships,
increasing a sense of belonging to groups, the
practical aspect of WhatsApp and the general
emotions associated with WhatsApp.
4.1 Upholding Social Relationships
Our interviewees described how WhatsApp made it
easier to maintain relationships and keep in touch
with other people. Many stated that they sent sporadic
greetings to friends and family, checking up on them
when they were on their minds, asking them how they
and their families were. Some were inspired to
contact people they had not contacted in a while by
scrolling through their WhatsApp chats. Users said
that they could write a message without worrying
about bothering their counterparts at an inappropriate
time. The messages were door-openers to arrange
face-to-face meetings, which were felt to be
preferable for longer and complex or emotionally
deep exchanges. Sending a WhatsApp message was
assumed to be less disturbing than calling and
involved less effort than writing an e-mail, card or
letter.
The use of WhatsApp to simplify the maintenance
of relationships was especially salient in case of
family members or friends living abroad or on
holiday. Informants described how they appreciated
receiving information from their children about their
whereabouts and safe arrival at home or the holiday
destination. Sharing holiday impressions or
impressions from every-day life in the form of
pictures, videos or texts made the geographic distance
bridgeable and allowed for the continuation of
relationships to people abroad. Further aspects
addressed were costs and the time difference, which
both could be ignored while sending WhatsApp
messages to other countries.
In maintaining relationships with already close
family members and friends, WhatsApp allows for
spontaneity and synchronous as well as asynchronous
communication, which can be adapted to either sides
time constraints and schedules, to be unintrusive but
still direct and easy.
4.2 Intensifying Social Relationships
Our participants often described that WhatsApp
exchanges not only allowed them to maintain
relationships but also to intensify relationships and
strengthen the feeling of relatedness to individuals
and groups. Through exchanging small and everyday
events as well as emotional milestones, like
grandchildren's first steps, our informants gained
insights into the day to day lives of their family and
friends and which made them feel closer to them.
Especially thanks to the various functions of
WhatsApp used by our interviewees in different
intensity (text messages, pictures, videos, voice
messages and emojis) a multi-dimensional exchange
was created, which could be shaped according to
personal preference.
In addition to the broad scale of possibilities in
expressing themselves, our interviewees stated that
the frequency of exchanges with social ties had
increased by using WhatsApp. This increased the
feeling of intensity of relationships, as the contacts
were present and closer to our interviewees day to day
lives.
4.3 Belonging to a Group
Not only regarding individuals, but also groups,
WhatsApp seemed to have a positive effect on the
perception of closeness and sense of belonging of our
informants. WhatsApp group chats amongst siblings,
friends and hobby or club groups were widely used,
mostly for planning and coordinative purposes. While
exchanges in group chats were sometimes perceived
as uninteresting or irrelevant, especially in groups
located in the outermost circles of our informant's
network maps, the exchanges with groups involving
close friends and family made our informants feel
more included. Most used were family WhatsApp
groups, which included the informant, their spouse,
their children and in case old enough, grandchildren.
Here, information, extraordinary and every-day
occurrences, greetings, pictures, thoughts, jokes and
memories were exchanged.
Regarding WhatsApp groups with social contacts
our informants listed in the inner two circles on the
network map (usually family and close friends), our
informants felt more included and a stronger sense of
belonging and community.
4.4 Organising and Planning
Next to subjectively perceived emotional aspects,
informants also described a mainly practical aspect of
WhatsApp’s Influence on Social Relationships of Older Adults
95
WhatsApp. WhatsApp was described as a very
practical tool for coordinating and organising social
life. Whether this meant arranging to go to the cinema
with a friend, inviting their children to dinner, going
on a day trip with a group of friends, managing a
shared holiday home, coordinating telephone calls,
the care of grandchildren or confirming attendance to
club events, WhatsApp was widely used to arrange
appointments of all sorts. Group chats were especially
mentioned as practical to organise and coordinate
reoccurring or one-time events. Another use and
motivation of family chats was the coordination of the
care for a sick or older family member.
Speed and immediacy were other positive practical
aspects of WhatsApp. The rapidity allowed
informants to send spontaneous invitations to their
children, let them know they were dropping by, or ask
their spouse to buy some groceries on the way home.
Many of our informants were able to use WhatsApp
with mobile data, allowing them to quickly let other
people know if they were running late for an
appointment.
WhatsApp was stated to be quick and practical in
coordinating between several people and had the
benefit of being unintrusive, leaving the receiver the
time to answer at his or her convenience. The
inhibition to contact other people, for fear of
disturbing them was low.
4.5 Enriching Everyday Life
In general, WhatsApp was associated with light,
interesting and pleasurable contents. Informants
stated that they would never discuss sensitive matters
over WhatsApp. They were unanimously of the
opinion, that conflicts and serious discussions should
be discussed face-to-face “at a table” or at least on the
telephone, where they would be able to hear their
counterpart's voice. Some reported forwarding jokes,
funny pictures or videos to others, after careful
consideration, whether the recipient would be
interested in the content or not. Irrelevant or
inappropriate content they received was ignored or
immediately deleted. Taken together, our informants
stressed the positivity and the pleasure of messages
received and sent.
Our interviewees mentioned only a few negative
experiences with WhatsApp, including handling
problems and misunderstandings caused by
autocorrect mistakes. Some interviewees further
mentioned that feeling pressured into answering
messages as soon as possible. Taken together, these
negative aspects did not seem salient in our
participants' memories and didn't lead to giving up, or
not using WhatsApp.
5 DISCUSSION
Our results show that older adults' communication via
WhatsApp focuses strongly on socio-emotionally
meaningful interactions. Older adults use WhatsApp
to create, maintain and intensify meaningful ties. Not
only the relation to their conversation partners but
also the shared content is predominantly positive, of
interest and emotionally meaningful to older users.
These findings are consistent with Carstensen's
theory of socioemotional selectivity. The older adults
reported almost no misunderstandings or conflicts
carried out via WhatsApp, an indication of the
capacity to successfully regulate emotions and not get
carried away (Carstensen, Fung, & Charles, 2003).
Receiving a WhatsApp message is a sign of
attention and stills the need to be seen or noticed. One
of our informants described it as a “digital caress”.
WhatsApp fulfilled the need for belonging and
relatedness and in the role of both receiver and
sender, our informants spoke of pleasure and
lightness. Previous studies draw upon theories of
human needs, to explain the popularity of WhatsApp
among younger adults (Karapanos, Teixeira,
Gouveia, 2015; Kim, Wang, & Oh, 2016). Sheldon
lists relatedness, pleasure-stimulation and popularity
as universal human needs (Sheldon, Elliot, Kim, &
Kasser, 2001). Our findings reveal, that WhatsApp
use can satisfy these human needs for older adults.
All our informants navigated a mix of mediated
communication channels mainly including e-mails,
telephone calls (landline and mobile), SMS and more
rarely letters, greeting cards, social media and other
instant messaging services. In comparison to these,
WhatsApp was described as unintrusive,
spontaneous, light, quick and easy, but only for
consciously chosen and fitting occasions and
relationships. WhatsApp was thus used to arrange
phone calls, which without prior arrangement might
be disturbing or pushy.
By using WhatsApp interviewees discover new
ways of maintaining contacts and communication,
nonintrusive, spontaneous, light, quick and delightful
ways of communication. Making a phone-call or
writing an e-mail is in comparison to this an act of
communication, that demands more time, calm and
attention. The possibility to exchange snapshots of
one's day to day life easily leads to a stronger feeling
of relatedness and intensity of a relationship without
however changing the character of the relationship
ICT4AWE 2020 - 6th International Conference on Information and Communication Technologies for Ageing Well and e-Health
96
itself. We see WhatsApp as a medium for phatic
communication (Taipale & Farinosi, 2018) since the
social function of communication is essential. Phatic
communication is an essential resource for managing
quasi-continuous social relationships by exchanging
short but expressive messages that have an impact on
maintaining or strengthen social bonds (Licoppe &
Smoreda, 2005) and WhatsApp seems to be an
appropriate instrument for this end.
What our research equally shows, is that older
people are open to using new technologies (see also
Czaja & Lee, 2007; Pelizäus-Hoffmeister, 2013), if
the use is meaningful to them and related with a clear
added value. In the case of older adults' use of
WhatsApp the benefits are of practical (organising
and planning) and emotional nature (intensifying and
maintaining social relationships and increased
feelings of belonging).
6 LIMITATIONS
In our explorative and qualitative study, we focused
on older WhatsApp users and their perspectives to
gain deep insights into this specific user group.
Interviews with younger members of our informants'
networks would have allowed for more
multiperspective insights into the topic. The inclusion
of non-users of WhatsApp would have been
beneficial to shed light on differences in the
construction of social relationships of users and non-
users of the service. Further, our small sample size
and recruitment process do not allow for a
generalization of the results. These limitations are a
starting point for further research on older adults and
their use of WhatsApp in shaping social relationships.
7 CONCLUSIONS
We conclude that the use of WhatsApp is in line with
the socioemotional selectivity theory (Carstensen,
Fung, & Charles, 2003) and can intensify emotional
bonds between users. At the same time, our findings
indicate that digital communication services do not
fundamentally change the way older people shape
their social networks and the priorities they set.
Further, our research shows how our informants
consciously used WhatsApp to achieve positive
personal ends and that instant messaging services can
positively impact the social relationships of older
persons. The use of instant messaging services like
WhatsApp can be seen as a potential added value to
older adults, allowing them to achieve goals of
selecting and investing time in socially meaningful
relationships.
Contrary to studies purporting isolation and social
exclusion of older adults due to a “digital divide”, we
show that older adults are willing and capable of
adapting new technologies if the uses and benefits are
clear to them and thus should be considered as active
participants in digitalisation.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The authors thank all participants for their openness
in sharing their experiences on using WhatsApp. This
study received funding by the Swiss National Science
Foundation (no. 10DL11_183117 / 1).
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