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    Now reading: researchers have discovered which social media platform is the worst for your mental health

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    researchers have discovered which social media platform is the worst for your mental health

    It’s official, Instagram is making you feel terrible.

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    This article was originally published by i-D Australia.

    Mental health and social media have a complex relationship: the argument over whether our connection to these platforms is positive or negative shifts weekly. Sharing your life online offers the opportunity to edit out any shadow of reality, leaving behind a sunny artificial version of reality. Anyone who has ever got stuck in an internet hole of someone else’s perfect, millennial pink-hued, Acai bowl-fueled life understands how shitty that can make you feel. But platforms like Tumblr, Twitter, and Instagram also offer a lifeline to people beyond your immediate community, and allows individuals to explore emotions in less confronting ways.

    Now, the UK’s Royal Society for Public Health has weighed in on the issue with its new study #StatusofMind. It interviewed almost 1,500 people aged between 14 and 23 about how Instagram, Snapchat, Twitter, Facebook, and YouTube impacted their mental health. The findings revealed that Instagram was the most detrimental, especially for young women. The popular app stood apart for its ability to literally filter out any imperfections, which in turn left consumers feeling anxious, depressed, lonely, and unfulfilled — or as they say online, with mad FOMO.

    Interestingly, considering recent conversations around censoring queer voices, YouTube came out best: they were the only platform to receive a positive rating. Although the group stressed all frequent social media use was found to leave people feeling worse off; specially, spending more than two hours a day scrolling leaves you likely to experience psychological distress.

    Reflecting on these findings, the Royal Society for Public Health suggested that social media platforms follow the path of many publications and issue a disclaimer when an image has been altered. They admit it’s a tricky policy to monitor across all users, but they did comment that “fashion brands, celebrities, and other advertising organizations may sign up to a voluntary code of practice where the small icon is displayed on their photos to indicate an image may have been digitally enhanced or altered to significantly alter the appearance of people in it.”

    While the findings are a bit grim, although not totally shocking, president of the UK’s Royal College of Psychiatrists Sir Simon Wessely was quick to add some context and point out that wellbeing can’t be maintained by simply putting your phone on airplane mode. “I am sure that social media plays a role in unhappiness, but it has as many benefits as it does negatives… We need to teach children how to cope with all aspects of social media — good and bad — to prepare them for an increasingly digitized world. There is real danger in blaming the medium for the message.” In short, scroll with care.

    Credits


    Text Wendy Syfret
    Image via Instagram

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