Take a Social Media Break to Improve Mental Health

With 82 percent of Americans using apps like Facebook, Instagram and
TikTok, scrolling through social media has become an unconscious
automatic behavior for many. But that distraction comes with a price,
indicates a new study by the UK’s University of Bath.
Half of the 154 participants ages 18 to 72 stopped using virtually all
social media for one week, reducing their average usage time from eight
hours to 21 minutes for that period. After the seven days, they showed
significant improvements in their well-being, depression and anxiety
scores compared to those in a control group that did not take such a
break. “Scrolling social media is so ubiquitous that many of us do it
almost without thinking, from the moment we wake up to when we close our
eyes at night,” says lead researcher Jeff Lambert. “But if you are
spending hours each week scrolling and you feel it is negatively
impacting you, it could be worth cutting down on your usage to see if it
helps.”