Most US children use Tik Tok, Instagram against age rules on platforms: Study

IANS January 11, 2025 386 views

A groundbreaking study has uncovered that most children aged 11-12 are using social media platforms like TikTok and Instagram, despite clear age restrictions. Researchers found alarming signs of potential addiction, with 25% of children reporting obsessive behaviors around social media use. The study highlights significant mental health concerns, including links to depression and disruptive behaviors. Experts like Dr. Jason Nagata are calling for immediate policy interventions to protect young users online.

"Policymakers need to look at Tik Tok as a systemic social media issue" - Jason Nagata, UCSF Pediatrician
Most US children use Tik Tok, Instagram against age rules on platforms: Study
New York, Jan 11: Most children aged 11 and 12 use Tik Tok, Instagram and other social media despite the platforms' age restrictions, and many show signs of addiction to social media, a team of researchers have found.

Key Points

1

25% of children show social media addiction symptoms

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Majority of 11-12 year olds have accounts against rules

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Study reveals potential mental health risks for underage users

The US Supreme Court is likely to uphold a law that would ban TikTok in the US beginning January 19. TikTok has around 170 million users in the country.

Tik Tok, Instagram, YouTube and Snapchat require users to be at least 13 years old to have an account.

But the study found that a majority of 11 and 12-years olds across the country have accounts on the platforms, and 6.3 per cent have a social media account they hide from their parents.

"Policymakers need to look at Tik Tok as a systemic social media issue and create effective measures that protect children online," said Jason Nagata, a paediatrician at UCSF Benioff Children's Hospitals and the lead author of the study.

The study included data from a national sample of over 10,000 children between the ages of 11 and 15 and appeared in the journal Academic Pediatrics.

In a previous study, Nagata found that problematic social media use among children included elements of addiction, such as the inability to stop despite trying, withdrawal, tolerance, conflict, and relapse.

In the current study, 25 per cent of children with social media accounts reported often thinking about social media apps, and 25 per cent said they use the apps to forget about their problems; 17 per cent tried to use social media less but couldn't; and 11 per cent said using social media too much had hurt their schoolwork.

"Our study revealed a quarter of children reported elements of addiction while using social media, with some as young as eleven years old. The research shows underage social media use is linked with greater symptoms of depression, eating disorders, ADHD, and disruptive behaviours," the authors said.

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