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Mike Males's avatar

83% of teens who told the CDC survey they were frequently depressed, and 84% of those who reported being cyberbullied, also reported histories of being emotionally and/or violently abused by parents and household adults -- and many more had parents/caretakers who suffered addiction, severe depression, and jailing. I don't doubt that a small fraction of teens and adults who have problems elsewhere in their lives may find these problems exacerbated by unhealthy social media use, and abused and depressed teens do use social media more than non-abused teens, often to seek contacts and help. To simply ignore the dominant role of parent/adult-inflicted abuses in driving teens' mental health problems and pretend the whole problem is just teens' developmental stage and social media habits is bizarre and unproductive. Somehow, we have devolved into fixating on the mouse in the room and ignoring the elephant.

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Tracy Markle's avatar

Hello- I am a mental health clinician/family therapist and I have been treating digital media overuse (DMO) and addictions for the past 15 years via our center Digital Media Treatment & Education Center. We developed a systemic based treatment approach about 10 years ago, and we train clinicians on utilizing it, and many associated areas to DMO. We have offered clinical trainings since about 2018 to those in the mental health field, etc, and we find people love learning the information, however we are finding mental health clinicians as a whole are slow to embrace this field as an important, necessary part of their work, even a speciality. Our cohort is still so small, yet growing. We have different thoughts about this challenge; such as, limited research as you point out, it is a complicated problem area to treat given how prevalent/pervasive devices are in schools, at work, in families; we are very accepting as a society of devices and apps, the US is slow to embrace the ICD-11 which now includes gaming disorder and compulsive sexual behavior disorder, therefore insurance will not cover these as disorders and legal accommodations do not yet apply for kids who just can't learn on devices due to their inability to control their online behaviors, and clearly there is yet to be a clear standard of practice for treatment. From our perspective each application typically seen as problematic/"addictive" (gaming, social media, porn, compulsive spending/gambling, and info overload) requires a specific focus and interventions- it is not about treating "internet addiction" anymore. It is a slow moving train and without more guidance, therapists as whole feel directionless. And I must note, important institutions doing very important research on screen related problem areas (ABCD study) such as, the national institute of health (NIH) are being required to have their funding diminished. It will limit our ability to truly do good work and publish necessary research findings.

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