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Which adolescents are at risk of depression due to early use of social media?

Teenagers on social media

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A new study examined the link between early social media use and depression in adolescence and young adulthood. It found that certain factors can make social media use riskier or more protective in relation to depression. The results were published in Journal for Adolescencesuggest that social media use does not have the same impact on all adolescents and that an individualised approach is needed to determine the benefits and harms of social media on young people’s mental health.

For the study, 488 adolescents living in the United States were surveyed once a year for eight years (starting in 2010, when the average age of participants was 13). The researchers found five classes that differed in the way self-reported duration of social media use was related to depressive symptoms. Although high reported social media use was often associated with greater increases in depressive symptoms, this was not universal.

Social media use was associated with increased depression among adolescents who experienced greater parental hostility, peer bullying, anxiety, stress reactivity, and lower parental media monitoring, among many other characteristics and factors. Social media use was associated with less depression or was unrelated to depression.

“When thinking about whether social media might affect a particular teen, it’s important to take a broad perspective. If the teen is already in a vulnerable position (being bullied or having hostile parents or parents who don’t monitor their teen’s media), then the likelihood that social media is harmful is much greater. This is especially true if it is used more than 3 hours a day,” said corresponding author W. Justin Dyer, Ph.D., of Brigham Young University.

“However, if their friends and parents are warm and supportive, and parents monitor their teens’ media use, moderate social media use (less than 3 hours per day) can be a good thing. Teens seem to benefit greatly from having their parents provide guidance in navigating social media. That guidance can make all the difference.”

More information:
Who is most at risk? A person-centered approach to understanding the long-term relationship between early social media use and later depression in adolescence, DOI: 10.1002/jad.12362

Quote: Which adolescents are at risk for depression after early social media use? (June 26, 2024), accessed June 26, 2024 from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2024-06-adolescents-depression-early-social-media.html

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