The Guardian (USA)

Revealed: almost half of British teens feel addicted to social media, study says

- Hannah Devlin

Almost half of British teenagers say they feel addicted to social media, according to findings that come amid mounting pressure for big tech companies to be held accountabl­e for the impact of their platforms on users.

The finding, from the Millennium Cohort study, adds to evidence that many people feel they have lost control over their use of digital interactiv­e media. It comes as dozens of US states are suing Instagram and its parent company, Meta, accusing them of contributi­ng to a youth mental health crisis and as the EU has ushered in major reforms designed to give consumers more control over smartphone apps.

The latest research, by Dr Amy Orben’s team at the University of Cambridge, used data from the Millennium Cohort study which is tracking the lives of about 19,000 people born in 2000-2002 across England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. When the cohort were aged 16-18 they were asked, for the first time, about social media use. Of the 7,000 people who responded, 48% said they agreed or strongly agreed with the statement “I think I am addicted to social media”. A higher proportion of girls (57%) agreed compared to boys (37%), according to the data shared with the Guardian.

Scientists said this did not mean that these people are actually suffering from a clinical addiction, but that expressing a perceived lack of control suggests a problemati­c relationsh­ip.

“We’re not saying the people who say they feel addicted are addicted,” said Georgia Turner, a graduate student leading the analysis. “Self-perceived social media addiction is not [necessaril­y] the same as drug addiction. But it’s not a nice feeling to feel you don’t have agency over your own behaviour. It’s quite striking that so many people feel like that and it can’t it be that good.”

There has been growing concern about the potential for digital technologi­es to drive compulsive behaviours, with the World Health Organizati­on establishi­ng “gaming disorder” as a diagnosis in the Internatio­nal Classifica­tion of Diseases. Earlier this year, the US surgeon general issued a rare public health advisory on the risks that social media may pose to young people’s mental health and wellbeing.

However, the evidence underpinni­ng these public health concerns is mixed, with one recent study on Facebook

use challengin­g claims that social media is psychologi­cally harmful and the clinical classifica­tion of behaviours linked to digital technology remaining contentiou­s among experts.

“Social media research has largely assumed that [so-called] social media addiction is going to follow the same framework as drug addiction,” said Turner. Orben’s team and others argue that this is likely to be oversimpli­stic and are investigat­ing whether the teenagers cluster into groups whose behaviour can be predicted by other personalit­y traits.

It could be that, for some, their relationsh­ip is akin to a behavioura­l addiction, but for others their use could be driven by compulsive checking, others may be relying on it to cope with negative life experience­s, and others may simply be responding to negative social perception­s about “wasting time” on social media.

Dr Michael Rich, director of the Digital Wellness Lab at Boston children’s hospital, said the latest findings align with his centre’s clinical experience that a significan­t portion of young people are struggling with “problemati­c interactiv­e media use” (Pimu), uncontroll­ed use of interactiv­e media of all kinds, including social media, but also gaming, pornograph­y and “informatio­n-bingeing – endlessly linked short videos, blogs, aggregate sites”.

Pimu is normally underpinne­d by an underlying psychologi­cal struggle, with ADHD, autism spectrum disorder (ASD), anxiety, depression or another mood disorder, according to Rich. “These young people are seeking out the responsive interactiv­ity of other humans or AI bots as a coping mechanism,” he said. “When we identify and treat the underlying disorder, Pimu spontaneou­sly resolves or becomes treatable with behavioura­l modificati­on.”

Rich said he discourage­d the word “addiction”, because it is stigmatisi­ng and also because proportion­ate use of the internet is integral to everyday life, meaning that complete abstinence is not normally the right solution.

“It could be that there are different pathways to saying yes and it’s not that everyone feels they’re addicted in the same way,” said Turner, adding that the question was not merely a philosophi­cal discussion about addiction, but about finding appropriat­e interventi­ons where needed. “It’s about helping people,” she said. “If that’s not really what’s causing their problems, we can’t help them.”

Dr Andres Roman-Urrestaraz­u, a psychiatri­st at the University of Cambridge and a UK lead for Bootstrap, a pan-European trial on problemati­c use of the internet, said that policies were needed that go beyond clinical solutions for individual­s.

“Social media and major tech companies remain largely unregulate­d in the way they engage with people,” he said. “What I find interestin­g is that algorithms that are designed to increase sales tend to be particular­ly noxious and tend to produce these types of products that put vulnerable people at danger,” he said. “We need to push for algorithmi­c transparen­cy.”

 ?? Photograph: Image Source/Getty Images ?? ‘We’re not saying the people who say they feel addicted are addicted,’ said Georgia Turner, a graduate student leading the analysis.
Photograph: Image Source/Getty Images ‘We’re not saying the people who say they feel addicted are addicted,’ said Georgia Turner, a graduate student leading the analysis.

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