Print
Email
Share

Doctors warn about Facebook use and teen depression

Doctors warn about Facebook use and teen depression

Doctors warn about Facebook use and teen depression

by Associated Press

KING5.com

Posted on March 28, 2011 at 6:57 AM

CHICAGO -  Add "Facebook depression" to potential harms linked with social media, an influential doctors' group warns, referring to a condition it says may affect troubled teens who obsess over the online site.

Researchers disagree on whether it's simply an extension of depression some kids feel in other circumstances, or a distinct condition linked with using the online site.

But there are unique aspects of Facebook that can make it a particularly tough social landscape to navigate for kids already dealing with poor self-esteem, said Dr. Gwenn O'Keeffe, a Boston-area pediatrician and lead author of new American Academy of Pediatrics social media guidelines.

With in-your-face friends' tallies, status updates and photos of happy-looking people having great times, Facebook pages can make some kids feel even worse if they think they don't measure up.

It can be more painful than sitting alone in a crowded school cafeteria or other real-life encounters that can make kids feel down, O'Keeffe said, because Facebook provides a skewed view of what's really going on. Online, there's no way to see facial expressions or read body language that provide context.

The guidelines urge pediatricians to encourage parents to talk with their kids about online use and to be aware of Facebook depression, cyberbullying, sexting and other online risks. They were published online Monday in Pediatrics.

Abby Abolt, 16, a Chicago high school sophomore and frequent Facebook user, says the site has never made her feel depressed, but that she can understand how it might affect some kids.

"If you really didn't have that many friends and weren't really doing much with your life, and saw other peoples' status updates and pictures and what they were doing with friends, I could see how that would make them upset," she said.

"It's like a big popularity contest - who can get the most friend requests or get the most pictures tagged," she said.

Also, it's common among some teens to post snotty or judgmental messages on the Facebook walls of people they don't like, said Gaby Navarro, 18, a senior from Grayslake, Ill. It's happened to her friends, and she said she could imagine how that could make some teens feel depressed.

"Parents should definitely know" about these practices," Navarro said. "It's good to raise awareness about it."

The academy guidelines note that online harassment "can cause profound psychosocial outcomes," including suicide. The widely publicized suicide of a 15-year-old Massachusetts girl last year occurred after she'd been bullied and harassed, in person and on Facebook.

"Facebook is where all the teens are hanging out now. It's their corner store," O'Keeffe said.

She said the benefits of kids using social media sites like Facebook shouldn't be overlooked, however, such as connecting with friends and family, sharing pictures and exchanging ideas.

"A lot of what's happening is actually very healthy, but it can go too far," she said.

Dr. Megan Moreno, a University of Wisconsin adolescent medicine specialist who has studied online social networking among college students, said using Facebook can enhance feelings of social connectedness among well-adjusted kids, and have the opposite effect on those prone to depression.

Parents shouldn't get the idea that using Facebook "is going to somehow infect their kids with depression," she said.
 

Print
Email
Share
 

To add a comment, please register or login.

1000 characters remaining

Submit

We welcome your comments on this story's topic. Off-topic comments, personal attacks, and inappropriate language may be flagged and removed, and comment privileges blocked, per our Terms of Service. Thanks for keeping the comments space respectful.

Privacy Policy

You have indicated this comment should be removed.

Close

The comment has been submitted for review. Thank you .

Comments: Displaying 1 - 4 of 4

mr_conservative said on March 28, 2011 at 10:14 AM

These millenials are such a sensitive bunch...and narcissistic, politically correct, and spoiled rotten.

63588024
Flag this comment

bazwest said on March 28, 2011 at 9:47 AM

hippie you actually made a fairly good observation (maybe by accident) that this consumer society of ours has nothing of lasting value to offer teens. In fact it doesn't really offer anything of lasting value to anyone. This will always be the case. It isn't the purpose of society. The problem is a problem of perspective. When people get the idea that society should provide them prosperity, health, happiness, safety, and so on, they are always shocked and dismayed to discover that it does a poor job of this. They haven't learned the often obscured truth that satisfaction, prosperity, and all the rest comes almost exclusively through hard work and personal ingenuity. Happiness usually comes from forgetting oneself and devoting time and energy to helping others be happy. Happiness comes from putting an arm around your teenage son or daughter and telling them how much you love and appreciate them for who they are, and by cherishing life and the struggles that go along with it.

63585792
Flag this comment

logic14 said on March 28, 2011 at 9:17 AM

This is so sad. Why do we continue to coddle these teens. If their parents did just that, parent, the kids would accept that someone else always has it better. Hard work and determination provide what you want. They instead watch TV and their peers that get everything and they feel entitled to it. Maybe if they had to earn the privilege of being on Face Book rather than just allowed hundreds of hours to envy others on it they would get this lesson. The problem isn't depressed teens it is bad parents.

63583514
Flag this comment

hippiescum said on March 28, 2011 at 7:42 AM

OK, psychiatrists -- this is your cue. Why don't you invent another mental illness, called something like "Facebook anxiety anti-social disorder", and then you can get together with your pharmaceutical company allies and maybe invent another psychoactive poison drug and unleash it upon this population of Facebook users. Do that instead of admitting that kids may be depressed because this delusional consumer society has nothing really of substance to offer them. They are a lot smarter than you give them credit for. It's also entirely possible that their screwed up parents have already got them strung out on Paxil, Adderall, Prozac, etc.

63577422
Flag this comment