"Teen suicide rates are at their highest level since 2000. And a new study released Monday says too much time on social media could be contributing to that." https://t.co/2gCEQeao5z
— HighWire (@HighWireTalk) July 16, 2019
New from me -- it's kind of meta to post this here https://t.co/y39yL9lPWK
— Kate McKenna (@katemckenna8) July 15, 2019
"Social media, but not video games, linked to depression in teens, according to landmark Montreal study"https://t.co/U9DlND1tNn #digcit pic.twitter.com/dWpu5YqsKo
— Dr. Alec Couros (@courosa) July 15, 2019
This research can't get done fast enough.
— Dean Huyck (@HuyckZen) July 16, 2019
Please, please, please Pay Attention.
As soon as you post something in order to collect artificial praise (the equivalent of stickers) you have put your self esteem in the hands of others.
Be careful.https://t.co/geVXwGweTj
See, told you mom: “Video gaming makes one more happy. It's a good pastime." The rest of the findings in this study is dreadful through https://t.co/VmnfzjFVNc
— David Coletto ??? (@Colettod) July 15, 2019
Study finds social media and television more likely to correlate with depression than video games in teens.https://t.co/awhqMmOlS6
— I,Hypocrite (@lporiginalg) July 16, 2019
Facebook Depression is a growing concern for teens and their parents. New research makes some links between screen time and mental health. Check out the full story here - https://t.co/vmrd87lXVb
— Martin Jones (@MartinJonesCBC) July 16, 2019
"What we found over and over was that the effects of social media were much larger than any of the other effects for the other types of digital screen time," said Patricia Conrod, a professor of psychiatry at the University of Montreal. https://t.co/Z714JykVJj
— CBC Toronto (@CBCToronto) July 15, 2019
Social media, but not video games, linked to depression in teens, according to landmark Montreal studyhttps://t.co/d0VaqvA5nS pic.twitter.com/32ncYy36Sv
— Mr Cheney (@mrccheney) July 15, 2019
Social media, but not video games, linked to depression in teens, according to Montreal studyhttps://t.co/MwYK5ikJ21
— Tyler Black, MD (@tylerblack32) July 15, 2019
"Video games are a good pasttime"
Unsurprisingly, Twitter and Instagram are not.
Social media, but not video games, linked to depression in teens, according to Montreal study #gbl #edtech #parentinghttps://t.co/ZvGnD8YAf7 pic.twitter.com/BjilW5DzmN
— Paul Darvasi (@PaulDarvasi) July 15, 2019
"Social media, but not video games, linked to depression in teens, according to Montreal study"
— Imre Jele (@imrejele) July 16, 2019
Wonder when will the UN / WHO declare a Social Media Disorder as a thing, instead of going on about their anti-gaming nonsense.https://t.co/mjtE0ay5Mo
Social media, but not video games, linked to depression in teens, according to Montreal study | #youth #mentalhealth #onpoli #cdnpoli https://t.co/0BHTAlXkFV
— Amanda Simard (@ASimardL) July 15, 2019
GAMING>TWEETINGhttps://t.co/gE9W0NaMrE
— Liberty Prime MK.II (@LibertyPrimeUSA) July 15, 2019
소셜 미디어와 TV의 사용 증가가 10 대 우울증 증상의 상승에 묶여 있다고 연구는 말하고 있다 https://t.co/wzH4DR83Ri
— editoy (@editoy) July 17, 2019
Teens Who Spend More Time on #SocialMedia Have Increased Depression: Study https://t.co/f2kU4aSR7p
— Evan Kirstel (@evankirstel) July 17, 2019
Teens Who Spend More Time on Social Media Have Increased Depression https://t.co/a3d98VkVR3
— Rich Tehrani (@rtehrani) July 16, 2019
Teens Who Spend More Time on Social Media Have Increased Depression: Study https://t.co/BnMYnMWKTh
— W. Boone Hedgepeth (@WBooneHedgepeth) July 16, 2019
New Study: Social media, but not video games, linked to depression in teens https://t.co/zB6E9h9AKn
— Matt Navarra (@MattNavarra) July 17, 2019
Second study like this that I have seen in as many months.
— Karen Vaites (@karenvaites) July 15, 2019
Instagram in particular "exposes young people to images that promote upward social comparison and makes them feel bad about themselves.”#sel #msmathchat #satchat #tlap https://t.co/3qJ1uRkd32
gaming > socialhttps://t.co/gJs0VBfjeQ
— Ben Mathews (@benmath_) July 16, 2019
Social media, but not video games, linked to depression in teens, according to Montreal studyhttps://t.co/e3mC8qJoB5 pic.twitter.com/LJmXZbYDe5
— Peggy Hargrave (@PeggyHargrave1) July 16, 2019
A very good read for those of us working closely with this age group- families as well #ocsb Social media, but not video games, linked to depression in teens, according to Montreal studyhttps://t.co/MG4MN9IovN pic.twitter.com/KlulYunzDh
— Anne Chiarelli (@anneOCSB) July 16, 2019
Video games made people happier and social media made them more prone to depressive symptoms.
— Matt Birchler (@mattbirchler) July 16, 2019
Basically: tweet less, play more games ?https://t.co/PlQCHBHHI1
Worth knowing about, if you use a lot of social media: new study links social media (but not video games!) with teen depression https://t.co/dc6RNUthvn #mentalhealth
— RCYBC Youth (@RCYBCyouth) July 16, 2019