‘Screen-use’problemsmay be driven bychildren with pre-existing mental-health conditions usingdevices to access disturbing content,thechief medical officer has said.
Professor Dame Sally Davies said she thought this was a more likely explanationthan access to smart phones and tablets themselvescausingmental health problems.
Speaking to MPs this morning, Professor Dame Sally Davies said that it was a “chicken and egg” conundrum.
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“The problem we have is: does screen time lead to mental-health problems?” she said. “Or do people with mental-health problems get caught by their screens and use them to hunt down things?
“So it’s chicken and egg, and it’s a very difficult one to sort out.”
on her own view of this conundrum, she added: “I suspect it’s that people who have a tendency to mild to moderate mental-health problems and then use their screens in that way.
“But that’s just from the reading I’ve done, and watching lots of young people and how they use it.”
Earlier this year, the UK’s four chief medical officers, including Dame Sally, .
This followed concerns over incidents such as the suicide of 14-year-old Molly Russell, in 2017. When Molly’s family looked at her Instagram account, they found material about depression and suicide. Her father has said that he believes that Instagram is partly responsible for her death.
Speaking to MPs today, Dame Sally said that social-media companies could do more to assist understanding of pupils’ screen use.
“They’re sitting on a lot of data about screen use, and what things different ages look for,” she said. “If, in signing up to these platforms, the children and young people have given their ages - which some of them will not have given the correct age - that will give us very useful data.”