The Asian Age

High social media use may not harm mental health

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New York: More time spent on Facebook and Twitter may not lead to poor mental health, according to a study which suggests that how people use social media is more important than the time they spend doing so.

There has so far been no evidence supporting the view that the amount of time spent on social media affects mental health in young people, said Chloe Berryman of the University of Central Florida in the US.

Researcher­s found very few links between different aspects of social media use among young adults and possible mental health problems such as loneliness, decreased empathy and social anxiety. “We do not deny the potential for some online behaviours to be associated with mental health problems, rather we propose that research focus on the behaviour of individual­s rather than assume media is the root cause of all socio- personal problems,” said Berryman, lead author of the study published in the journal Psychiatri­c Quarterly.

Berryman compared the response that some people have to social media to a form of “moral panic” such as that surroundin­g video games, comic books and rock music.

Berryman and her colleagues analysed the responses of 467 young adults to a variety of questionna­ires.

They were questioned about the amount of time per day they spent using social media, the importance it has in their lives, and the way they used social media.

Their current mental health state, levels of social anxiety, the quality of their relationsh­ip with their parents and the amount of social support that they could count on were also assessed.

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