Beyond Content Exposure: Systemic Factors Driving Moderators' Mental Health Crisis in Africa
This research addresses the severe mental health challenges faced by content moderators in Africa, highlighting systemic labor issues rather than just content exposure, which is an incremental but important focus.
The study investigated systemic factors contributing to the mental health crisis among content moderators in Africa, finding high psychological distress and lower well-being compared to other regions, with former moderators showing significantly higher distress levels.
Content moderators review disturbing content to protect social media users, often at significant cost to their mental health. Recent reports document the mental health conditions of African moderators as notably problematic. Beyond the content itself, what factors contribute to the deteriorating mental health of these workers? We surveyed 134 moderators across Africa to understand their mental health and interviewed 15 moderators to contextualize their experiences. We found that African moderators suffer from high psychological distress and lower well-being compared to moderators in other areas. Former moderators showed significantly higher distress levels, demonstrating long term impact that extends beyond their moderation work. Our interviews showed that systemic and structural labor conditions contribute to moderators' severe psychological distress and diminished mental well-being. Corporate wellness programs promoted by platforms were found ineffective and inadequate. We discuss how this requires holistic attention and structural solutions by all involved parties to improve moderators' mental health.