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Parents are more worried than teens about teen mental health. Both groups – especially parents – partly blame social media.
Against the backdrop of a deepening mental health crisis among American teenagers, a newly released survey of teens and their ...
A new Pew study finds that young people are more connected but also more critical of how social media shapes their lives.
New Pew data shows nearly half of the 1,400 teens surveyed believe social media is harmful to their generation.
Before we panic about teens turning to influencers for mental health advice, maybe we should ask why it’s working.
Blueprint highlights the ways that the celebration of Mental Health Awareness Month each May has championed the nation's ...
One in five U.S. teens say social media has negatively impacted their mental health and nearly half say it has a mostly negative impact on kids their age. A Pew Research Center report published ...
We know that social media can be harmful to teens. Meta has found in its own research that Instagram makes body image worse ...
The impact of social media on young people’s mental health and well-being is a growing topic of concern among parents, educators, health care professionals and regulators. And now, nearly half ...
May is Mental Health Awareness Month, making it a great time to put this critical issue in the spotlight. It's an issue that touches every family in some way around the country. It's evident in the ...
Social media (44%) and technology generally (14%) ranked highest as the one thing parents believed negatively impacted teens’ mental health, whereas only 22% and 8% of teens, respectively, said ...