BEWARE Facebook and Twitter 'harm young people's mental health' AROUND THE GLOBAL
Poll
of 14- to 24-year-olds shows Instagram, Facebook, Snapchat and
Twitter increased feelings of inadequacy and anxiety
Young
people scored Instagram the worst social medium for sleep, body image
and fear of missing out. Photograph: Mark Mawson/Getty Image
DenisCampbell Health policy editor
Friday
19 May 2017 08.08 BSTFirst published on Friday 19 May
2017 00.01 BST
Four
of the five most popular forms of social media harm young people’s
mental health, with Instagram the
most damaging, according to research by two health organisations.
Instagram
has the most negativeimpact on young people’s mental wellbeing,
a survey of almost 1,500 14- to 24-year-olds found, and the health
groups accused it of deepeningyoung people’s feelings of inadequacy and anxiety.
The
survey, published on Friday, concluded that Snapchat, Facebook and
Twitter are also harmful. Among the five only YouTube was judged to
have a positive impact.
The
four platforms have a negative effect because they can exacerbate
children’s and young people’s body image worries, and
worsen bullying,
sleep problems and feelings of anxiety, depression and loneliness,
the participants said.
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The
findings follow growing concern among politicians, health bodies,
doctors, charities and parents about young people suffering harm as a
result of sexting, cyberbullying and social media reinforcing
feelings of self-loathing and even the risk of them committing
suicide.
“It’s
interesting to see Instagram and Snapchat ranking as the worst for
mental health and wellbeing. Both platforms are very image-focused
and it appears that they may be driving feelings of inadequacy and
anxiety in young people,” said Shirley Cramer, chief executive of
the RoyalSociety for Public Health,
which undertook the survey with the YoungHealth Movement.
She
demanded tough measures “to make social media less of a wild west
when it comes to young people’s mental health and wellbeing”.
Social media firms should bring in a pop-up image to warn young
people that they have been using
it
a lot, while Instagram and similar platforms should alert users when
photographs of people have been digitally manipulated, Cramer said.
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The 1,479 young people surveyed were asked to rate the impact of the five forms of social media on 14 different criteria of health and wellbeing, including their effect on sleep, anxiety, depression, loneliness, self-identity, bullying, body image and the fear of missing out.
Instagram
emerged with the most negative score. It rated badly for seven of the
14 measures, particularly its impact on sleep, body image and fear of
missing out – and also for bullying and feelings of anxiety,
depression and loneliness. However, young people cited its upsides
too, including self-expression, self-identity and emotional support.
YouTube scored
very badly for its impact on sleep but positively in nine of the 14
categories, notably awareness and understanding of other people’s
health experience, self-expression, loneliness, depression and
emotional support.
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However,
the leader of the UK’s psychiatrists said the findings were too
simplistic and unfairly blamed social media for the complex reasons
why the mental health of so many young people is suffering.
Prof
Sir Simon Wessely, president of the Royal College of Psychiatrists,
said: “I am sure that social media plays a role in unhappiness, but
it has as many benefits as it does negatives.. We need to teach
children how to cope with all aspects of social media – good and
bad – to prepare them for an increasingly digitised world. There is
real danger in blaming the medium for the message.”
Young
Minds, the charity which Theresa May visited last week on a campaign
stop, backed the call for Instagram and other platforms to takefurther steps to protect young users.
Tom
Madders, its director of campaigns and communications, said:
“Prompting young people about heavy usage and signposting to
support they may need, on a platform that they identify with, could
help many young people.”
However,
he also urged caution in how content accessed by young people on
social media is perceived. “It’s also important to recognise that
simply ‘protecting’ young people from particular content types
can never be the whole solution. We need to support young people so
they understand the risks of how they behave online, and are
empowered to make sense of and know how to respond to harmful content
that slips through filters.”
Parents
and mental health experts fear that platforms such as Instagram can
make young users feel worried and inadequate by facilitating hostile
comments about their appearance or reminding them that they have not
been invited to, for example, a party many of their peers are
attending.
May,
who has made children’s mental health one of her priorities,
highlighted social media’s damaging effects in her “shared
society” speech in January, saying: “We know that the use of
social media brings additional concerns and challenges. In 2014, just
over one in 10 young people said that they had experienced
cyberbullying by phone or over the internet.”
In
February, Jeremy Hunt, the health secretary, warned social media and
technology firms that they could face sanctions, including through
legislation, unless they did more totackle sexting,
cyberbullying and the trolling of young users.
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