Takeaways from Surgeon General’s Advisory on Social Media and Youth Mental Health
3 Minute Read
Social media is having devastating effects on kids’ health.
In May, the US Surgeon General, Dr. Vivek Murthy, issued a startling advisory explaining the harms of social media on children and adolescents’ mental health.
Why this matters
Surgeon general advisories are reserved for the most crucial and far-reaching public health concerns. Past advisories include exposing the damage of smoking in 1964 and calling for action on nationwide overweight and obesity rates in 2001.
TL;DR
The full advisory is 25 pages long with valuable information. But we saved you the work of reading it and we are breaking down the four things you need to know from it. Here are our top takeaways:
“Frequent social media use may be associated with distinct changes in the developing brain in the amygdala (important for emotional learning and behavior) and the prefrontal cortex (important for impulse control, emotional regulation, and moderating social behavior), and could increase sensitivity to social rewards and punishments.”
Changes to the prefrontal cortex could lead kids and teens to engage in more impulsive and risky behavior like using substances. Additionally, heavy screen time is neurologically comparable to other addictions. The advisory specifically references studies finding that problematic social media use can lead to changes in brain structure similar to those seen in people with substance use addiction.
The potential for social media to “increase sensitivity to social rewards and punishments” could also make young people more vulnerable to peer pressure – this is concerning given that nearly a third of young vape users first tried e-cigarettes because a friend or family member uses them. And young social media users looking to try other substances wouldn’t have to search far. The report notes that social media platforms are prime sites for “interactions with malicious actors,” and specifically names the sale of illicitly manufactured fentanyl to youth as a cause for concern.
The advisory emphasizes that the burden is technology companies and policymakers to address this crisis. However, it also offers suggestions to empower parents and caregivers such as reporting cyberbullying and encouraging kids to be mindful of and responsible about their time online.
You can read the full report here.