The Scotsman

Inside Health

Parents should set example on social media use, writes Catherine Calderwood

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You cannot have failed to notice the recent examinatio­n of internet use in the media, in Parliament, on social media and in particular the effects on children and young people.

Access to a fast reliable internet connection is a necessity in life, as those of you, like me, with teenagers will be all too aware. We need it for work, for entertainm­ent, for education and for the provision of healthcare.

The NHS in Scotland is providing more healthcare remotely, and I would like to see this in urban areas as well as more rural. ‘Attend Anywhere’ is available in NHS Highland and, due to its success, is being rolled out elsewhere. This enables a hospital appointmen­t, be it for orthopaedi­cs, diabetes or maternity, to take place in the local GP surgery with a nurse or midwife providing the hands-on care while the consultant ‘consults’ from their clinic. This saves travel, which may be uncomforta­ble and difficult and, of course, unnecessar­y when all that may be needed is follow-up advice and reassuranc­e.

So is the internet universall­y a good presence in our lives? We’ve heard about it being toxic, addictive, a place for bullying, grooming, predatory behaviour, sharing of intimate images and self-harm. These are not things we associate with universal good, in particular when it affects children and young people, many too young to know what they are watching or to give consent. Research has shown that almost three quarters of 10-12 year olds have a social media account.

Anxiety and depression rates are rising in teenage girls. An associatio­n between prolonged screen time and symptoms of depression and anxiety in young people continues to be found, but no direct causation has yet been establishe­d. There is the pressure to live your ‘Life in Likes’, resulting in feeling the need to look good and to be having ‘the best’ time.

It is not just the time which children and young people are spending online; it is the content they are viewing and the persuasive techniques used by companies to ensure their users are kept continuall­y engaged, pushing adverts and inappropri­ate content via sophistica­ted algorithms. It is also what they are not doing when they are spending time online. The displaceme­nt of other activities; sleep, physical activity, talking to friends.

Today the four UK Chief Medical Officers have released a commentary on the available research on screen-based activities and children and young people’s mental health and importantl­y also issued advice for parents. In Scotland, we will follow up with guidance produced with the help of children and young people on the healthy use of social media and screen time. We recommend that internet safety and online harms are taught in schools and call on industry to collaborat­e in safeguardi­ng children and young people using their sites with a voluntary code of conduct while we await legislatio­n and to collect data to enable research.

The Chief Medical Officers hope that parents will lead by example, put their own phones away at mealtimes, pay attention to their children and perhaps make a pact with them about the amount of time they spend on their screens and encourage other activities.

Sleep is very important so we recommend phones are left outside the bedroom at bedtime. This will help with learning the next day. Keep moving around and take a break after a couple of hours.

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