1. Heavy Social Media Utilization
Leads to Depression
By: Connie Li
Photo source: Ashley Adcox
2. Utilization of social media such as Facebook, Instagram, and Snapchat
has increased dramatically in recent years, especially among
adolescents and young adults [3]
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3. A recent Ontario study indicates that 80% of young people use
social media on a daily basis, with almost 50% using it for over 2
hours per day [7]
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4. Photo source: Mister C.G.
What is the impact of social media usage
on the lives of young people?
5. Heavy social media
users are young
adults are 300%
more likely to be
depressed than
occasional users [7]
Facebook use
worsens “how
people feel moment to
moment and how
satisfied they are with
their lives” [7]
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6. Key Question: Why is the heavy usage of
social media associated with depression?
1. Negatively
impacts
physical
health
2. Passive use
is detrimental
to mental
health
3. Increases
their exposure
to cyber-
bullying
7. 1. Negatively Impacts
Physical Health
One study of adolescents indicates
that social media usage can seriously
disturb the quality and quantity of
sleep. This study shows that many
have difficultly logging-off and going
to sleep. Others may deliberately
wake up to check social media during
the night. [7]
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8. 1. Negatively Impacts Physical Health
One study of adolescents indicates
that social media usage can seriously
disturb the quality and quantity of
sleep. This study shows that many
have difficultly logging-off and going
to sleep. Others may deliberately
wake up to check social media during
the night. [1]
Likewise, heavy users of social media often remain slumped on a chair or
in their bed, shut up in their room, and glued to the screen. This means
that they are skipping meals or staying sedentary for excessive periods
of time [6].
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9. 2. Passive Use Is Bad For Mental Health
Passive use refers to the practice of quietly observing other people’s social
media profiles and pictures – sometimes known as “Facebook stalking” [3].
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10. One study shows that this can
lead to envy and
resentment, while another
indicates that passive use
provokes and intensifies a
negative emotional experience
known as “FOMO” the fear
of missing out. This can lower
self-esteem and well-being. [7]
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11. Study on 753 Ottawa students
between grade 7-12…
…uncovered an association between teenagers who are
heavy users of social media and poor mental health.
The study found that teens who are on social media for
more than 2 hours a day report poor self-rated mental
health, psychological distress, suicidal ideation or
unmet need for mental health support [6]
12. 3. Increases
Exposure To Cyber-
bulling
University of Alberta
study revealed that
there were distinctive
associations between
exposure to
cyberbullying and
increased likelihood
of depression [2].
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13. The studies covered a variety of social sites, but Facebook
was the most common – between 89% and 97.5% of the
teens who used social media had a Facebook account [2].
23%
of teens reported
being targeted
15%
of teens reported
bullying someone
online themselves.
14. Facebook knows that its social network feed tremendously affects the
moods of its users. For example, Facebook’s data scientists conducted a
controversial human behavior experiment where 689,003 users were
manipulated by having all positive posts or negatives posts removed
to see if it would affect the moods of the users [1]
Master OSM 2011
15. The Result:
Users that saw more negative
content shared more depressing
content themselves [1].
17. “Social media could be part
of the problem or part of the
solution or both”
- Elizabeth Payne [3]
18. A number of social media companies have been proactive at
helping users that appear to be depressed. For example, if a user
searches for tags on Tumblr such as “depressed” or “suicidal” then the
blog platform will show helpful resources and ask if everything is OK [1].
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19. Photo source: Mister C.G.
What should you do if heavy social media
is causing depression?
20. It is highly recommended to work
with a mental health
professional. Furthermore, you
should limit your social media
usage every day in favor of
other activities.
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21. Works Cited:
[1] Chowdhry, A. (2016, April 30). Research Links Heavy Facebook and Social Media Usage To Depression.
Retrieved from https://www.forbes.com/sites/amitchowdhry/2016/04/30/study-links-heavy-facebook-and-
social-media-usage-to-depression/2/#3596d9e87786
[2] Durlofsky, P. (2016). Can Too Much Social Media Cause Depression? Retrieved from
http://www.mainlinetoday.com/Blogs/Thinking-Forward/February-2014/Can-Too-Much-Social-Media-Cause-
Depression/
[3] Matrix, S. (2017). Module 1, Lecture 1, Part 1, Media Convergence
[4] Matrix, S. (2017). Module 1, Lecture 2, Part 2, Media Use Research
[5] Pappas, S. (2015, June 22). Cyberbullying on Social Media Linked to Teen Depression. Retrieved from
http://www.livescience.com/51294-cyberbullying-social-media-teen-depression.html
[6] Payne, E. (2015, August 08). Student links poor teen mental health to social media use. Retrieved from
http://ottawacitizen.com/news/local-news/study-links-poor-teen-mental-health-to-social-media-use
[7] Whitley, Robert. (2016, September 14). Here’s Why Social Media Harms Your Teen’s Mental Health.
Retrieved from http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/robertwhitley/social-media-mental-health_b_11893462.html