Social
media linked to higher risk of depression in teen girls
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[January 04, 2019]
LONDON (Reuters) - Teenage girls are twice
as likely as boys to show depressive symptoms linked to social media use
- mainly due to online harassment and disturbed sleep, as well as poor
body image and lower self-esteem, researchers said on Friday.
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In a study analyzing data from nearly 11,000 young people in
Britain, researchers found that 14-year-old girls were heavier users
of social media, with two-fifths of them using it for more than
three hours a day, compared with a fifth of boys.
The study also found that 12 percent of light social media users and
38 percent of heavy social media users (five-plus hours a day)
showed signs of having more severe depression.
When the researchers looked at underlying processes that might be
linked with social media use and depression, they found 40 percent
of girls and 25 percent of boys had experience of online harassment
or cyberbullying. Disrupted sleep was reported by 40 percent of
girls compared with 28 percent of boys. Anxiety and poor sleep are
both linked to depression.
Girls were also more affected when it came to social media use and
concerns about body image, self-esteem and appearance, the
researchers found, but here the gap with boys was smaller.
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Yvonne Kelly, a professor at University College London's Institute
of Epidemiology & Health Care who co-led the research, urged parents
and policymakers to note its results.
“These findings are highly relevant to current policy development on
guidelines for the safe use of social media and calls on industry to
more tightly regulate hours of social media use for young people,"
she said in a statement.
She said families may also "want to reflect on when and where it’s
ok to be on social media" and consider restrictions on teenagers
having mobile devices in their bedrooms.
The study, funded by the UK Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC),
was published online in the journal EClinicalMedicine on Friday.
(Reporting by Kate Kelland; Editing by Robin Pomeroy)
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