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  • Real Risk to Youth Mental Health Is ‘Addictive Use,’ Not . . .
    Dr Nagata and his team found a link between higher screen time at age 9 and suicidal behaviors two years later, with each additional hour of screen time associated with 1 09 higher odds of mental
  • Addictive Screen Use, Not Time, Tied to Teen Suicide Risk
    Summary: A major new study reveals that teens who develop compulsive patterns of digital use are at higher risk of suicidal thoughts, attempts, and mental health issues Unlike total screen time, it’s the addictive nature of use—such as distress when not online or using screens to escape—that most strongly predicts poor outcomes
  • Study Finds Addictive Screen Use, Not Total Screen Time . . .
    “Clinical trials have shown that limiting cell phone use, for instance during school hours, was not effective in reducing the risk of suicidal behavior or improving other aspects of mental health ” This study could signal a paradigm shift in how the impact of screen time on youth mental health is addressed
  • Addiction to Screen Time Tied to Suicidality in U. S. Kids - MSN
    As for video games, the high addictive use trajectory was associated with higher risk of suicidal behaviors (RR 1 54, P=0 004) and suicidal ideation (RR 1 53, P<0 001) than the low addictive risk
  • Screen Addiction, Not Time, Is Key Youth Suicide Risk, Study . . .
    For years, the debate surrounding youth mental health and technology has fixated on a single metric: screen time How many hours are teens spending glued to their devices? But a groundbreaking new study published in the medical journal JAMA offers a surprising twist, suggesting that the real danger isn't the amount of time online, but
  • Addictive use of social media, not total time, associated . . .
    A new study finds that preteens with addictive patterns of social media, video games, or mobile phones use are more likely to experience worse mental health and suicidal thoughts and behaviors nbsp;
  • Weekday Screen Time Can Quadruple Teens’ Risk Of Mental . . .
    Now, science gives them concrete reasons to worry: teens who spend more than two hours on screens during weekdays face double the risk of anxiety and four times the likelihood of emotional and behavioral problems


















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