Tech time not to blame for teens’ mental health problems
A new study, published
in the journal Clinical
Psychological Science, suggests that the time adolescents are
spending on their phones and online is not that bad.
The study tracked young adolescents on their smartphones to test whether
more time spent using digital technology was linked to worse mental health
outcomes. The researchers — Candice Odgers, professor of psychological science
at the University of California, Irvine; Michaeline Jensen, assistant professor
of psychology at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro; Madeleine
George, postdoctoral researcher at Purdue University; and Michael Russell,
assistant professor of behavioral health at Pennsylvania State University —
found little evidence of longitudinal or daily linkages between digital
technology use and adolescent mental health.
“It may be time for adults to stop arguing over whether smartphones and
social media are good or bad for teens’ mental health and start figuring out
ways to best support them in both their offline and online lives,” Odgers said.
“Contrary to the common belief that smartphones and social media are
damaging adolescents’ mental health, we don’t see much support for the idea
that time spent on phones and online is associated with increased risk for
mental health problems,” Jensen said.
The study surveyed more than 2,000 youth and then intensively tracked a
subsample of nearly 400 teens on their smartphones multiple times a day for two
weeks. Adolescents in the study were between 10 and 15 years old and
represented the economically and racially diverse population of youth attending
North Carolina public schools.
The researchers collected reports of mental health symptoms from the
adolescents three times a day and they also reported on their daily technology
usage each night. They asked whether youth who engaged more with digital
technologies were more likely to experience later mental health symptoms and
whether days that adolescents spent more time using digital technology for a
wide range of purposes were also days when mental health problems were more
common. In both cases, increased digital technology use was not related to
worse mental health.
When associations were observed, they were small and in the opposite
direction that would be expected given all of the recent concerns about digital
technology damaging adolescents’ mental health. For instance, teens who reported
sending more text messages over the study period actually reported feeling
better (less depressed) than teens who were less frequent texters.
No comments:
Post a Comment