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A new Pew study finds that young people are more connected but also more critical of how social media shapes their lives.
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 ...
Research shows that, over the past two decades, rates of mental illness have been increasing in adolescents in many countries ...
A recent Pew Research Center study also found 48% of teens agree social media has a largely negative impact on teens.
New Pew data shows nearly half of the 1,400 teens surveyed believe social media is harmful to their generation.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, nearly one in four adults in the United States lives with a ...
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 ...
Mental health advocate Cal Beyer talks to Radio Ink about how broadcasters can spot early emotional warning signs and build ...
May marks Mental Health Awareness Month which aims to bring attention to those suffering from mental illnesses like ...
The impact of social media on young people’s mental health and well-being is a growing topic of concern among parents, ...