| Literature DB >> 36011593 |
Elena Bozzola1,2, Giulia Spina1,2, Rino Agostiniani2,3, Sarah Barni1,2, Rocco Russo2, Elena Scarpato2,4, Antonio Di Mauro2, Antonella Vita Di Stefano2, Cinthia Caruso2, Giovanni Corsello2,5, Annamaria Staiano2,4.
Abstract
In recent years, social media has become part of our lives, even among children. From the beginning of COVID-19 pandemic period, media device and Internet access rapidly increased. Adolescents connected Internet alone, consulting social media, mostly Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube. During "lockdown", the Internet usage allowed communication with peers and the continuity activities such as school teaching. However, we have to keep in mind that media usage may be related to some adverse consequences especially in the most vulnerable people, such as the young. Aim of the review is to focus on risks correlated to social media use by children and adolescents, identifying spies of rising problems and engaging in preventive recommendations. The scoping review was performed according to PRISMA guidelines, searching on PubMed the terms "social media" or "social network", "health", and "pediatrics". Excluding articles not pertinent, we found 68 reports. Out of them, 19 were dealing with depression, 15 with diet, and 15 with psychological problems, which appeared to be the most reported risk of social media use. Other identified associated problems were sleep, addiction, anxiety, sex related issues, behavioral problems, body image, physical activity, online grooming, sight, headache, and dental caries. Public and medical awareness must rise over this topic and new prevention measures must be found, starting with health practitioners, caregivers, and websites/application developers. Pediatricians should be aware of the risks associated to a problematic social media use for the young's health and identify sentinel signs in children as well as prevent negative outcomes in accordance with the family.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; adolescents; children; health; social media; social network
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36011593 PMCID: PMC9407706 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19169960
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 4.614
Figure 1Flow chart of the selection process. * automation tools were used: 6 records were excluded by automation tools and 3 were excluded by authors. Twenty-five records were excluded because they were not written in English, these were identified using automation tools, but then checked by authors. ** 49 records were removed because they were published before 2004, and no social network existed before that year.
Social media health related problems in a pediatric population. This table shows the issues found in this scoping review. Depression was argued in 19 reports, being the main topic found (27.9% of the whole study). Diet associated problems were discussed in 15 reports, cyberbullying in 15, psychological problems in 14, sleep related problems in 13, addiction in 10, anxiety in 10, sex related problems in 9, behavioral problems in 7, body images distortion in 6, reduced physical activity and related problems has been reported in 5 reports, online grooming in 3 reports, sight problems in 3, also headache in 3, and dental caries in total of 2 articles.
| Issue |
| % |
|---|---|---|
| Depression | 19 | 27.9% |
| Diet | 15 | 22.1% |
| Cyberbullying | 15 | 22.1% |
| Psychological Problems | 14 | 20.6% |
| Sleep | 13 | 19.1% |
| Addiction | 10 | 14.7% |
| Anxiety | 10 | 14.7% |
| Sex Related | 9 | 13.2% |
| Behavioral Problems | 7 | 10.3% |
| Body Image | 6 | 8.8% |
| Physical Activity | 5 | 7.4% |
| Online Grooming | 3 | 4.4% |
| Sight | 3 | 4.4% |
| Headache | 3 | 4.4% |
| Dental Caries | 2 | 2.9% |
Social media and depression.
| Domains | Reference | Type of Publication | Highlighted |
|---|---|---|---|
| Depression | Chiu M. et al. [ | Clinical study | Social media increased use correlates to Emergency Department visits for mental illness, including depression, addiction, and anxiety. |
| Depression | Rutter L.A. et al. [ | Clinical study | Social media use correlates with depressive symptoms, anxiety, and loneliness. Physical activity negatively correlates with depression. |
| Depression | Mougharbel F. et al. [ | Review | High levels of screen time and social media use correlates to depression, anxiety, and misperception of body image, addiction, and mental health outcomes. |
| Depression | Hoge E. et al. [ | Review | The more time adolescents spend on smartphone, the higher levels of depression, insomnia, and anxiety are found one year later. |
| Depression | Hoare E. et al. [ | Clinical study | Adolescents suffering for depression and mental health impairment in adolescence reported a greater use of social media. |
| Depression | Ha L. et al. [ | Clinical study | Swedish adolescents who spent more than 2 h on social media had higher odds of feeling depressed. |
| Depression | Chassiakos Y.L.R. et al. [ | Review | Risks of media device use include obesity, sleep, attention, and learning impairment, illicit substance use, high-risk sexual behaviors, depression, cyberbullying, and compromised privacy and confidentiality. |
| Depression | Maurer B.T. et al. [ | Review | An increase in digital and social media use relates to physical and mental status impairment in children, including depression, anxiety, cyberbullying, sleep disturbance, behavioral problems, sexting, and myopia. |
| Depression | Keles B. et al. [ | Review | Time spent on social media, repetitive activities, addictive, or problematic use associated with depression, anxiety, and psychological impairment. Nevertheless, it is not possible to establish whether a causative effect exists. |
| Depression | Khalil S.A. et al. [ | Clinical Study | A percentage of 65.6% of Egyptians adolescents are having internet addiction, especially Facebook addiction (92.8%) and gaming (61.3%). Those affected by Facebook addiction are at risk of dysthymia. |
| Depression | Richards D. et al. [ | Review | Social media overuse impacts on mental health, self-esteem, and wellbeing. |
| Depression | Hadjipanayis A. et al. [ | Review | Social media use facilitates socialization, communication, learning skills, and may positively affect education. Potential risks include cyberbullying, Facebook depression, sleep disturbances, and sexting. |
| Depression | Hamm M.P. et al. [ | Review | Cyberbullying and depression correlate with a regular and constant social media use. |
| Depression | Carpenter L.M. et al. [ | Review | Internet, mobile devices, and social networking sites link to mental health impairment and cyberbullying. |
| Depression | Aboujaoude E. et al. [ | Review | Internet penetrance and connectivity are strictly related to cyberbullying and altered mental status. |
| Depression | Listernick Z.I. et al. [ | Review | Depressive symptoms increased during COVID-19 pandemic era. Risk factors include social isolation, family stress, and social media overuse. |
| Depression | Armitage R.C. et al. [ | Letter to editor | The degree of social media usage in children correlates with depression, anxiety, and perceived stress level. Bedtime access to and use of mobile devices is significantly associated with inadequate sleep in terms of quality and quantity. |
| Depression | Caffo E. et al. [ | Review | Many factors including isolation, excessive social media use, and parental stress worsened mental status health during COVID-19 era. |
| Depression | Chen I.H. et al. [ | Review | During school closure in COVID-19 pandemic smartphone and social media use increased. An increase of 15–30 min daily negatively influenced mental health status in children. |
Social media and diet.
| Domains | Reference | Type of Publication | Highlighted |
|---|---|---|---|
| Depression | Chassiakos Y.L.R. et al. [ | Review | Risks of media device use include obesity, sleep, attention, and learning impairment, illicit substance use, high-risk sexual behaviors, depression, cyberbullying, and compromised privacy and confidentiality. |
| Diet | Théodore F.L. et al. [ | Clinical Study | Digital Marketing represents a major threat for children and adolescents in Mexico, because of its persuasive techniques. |
| Diet | Radesky J. et al. [ | Clinical Study | Exposure to advertising is associated with unhealthy behaviors. Children are uniquely vulnerable to the persuasive effects of advertising because of immature critical thinking skills and impulse inhibition. Ads also promote intake of foods that contribute to dental caries. |
| Diet | Folkvord F. et al. [ | Review | Unhealthy food is advertised intensively on several media platforms that are increasingly used by children. This contributes to the obesity epidemic. |
| Diet | Sacks G. et al. [ | Clinical Study | Exposure to the marketing of unhealthy products, on social media is associated with a higher risk of related unhealthy behaviors. |
| Diet | Tan L. et al. [ | Clinical Study | Unhealthy food marketing to children is a key risk factor for childhood obesity. Analysis of ads encountered in YouTube videos targeted at children revealed that food and beverage ads appeared most frequently with more than half of these promoting noncore or unhealthy foods. |
| Diet | Murphy G. et al. [ | Clinical Study | Adolescents respond more positively to unhealthy food advertising compared to healthy food or non-food advertising. |
| Diet | Lutfeali S. et al. [ | Clinical Study | Heavy social media users (>3 h/day) were 6.366 times more willing to comment on ads compared to light users ( |
| Diet | Khan M. et al. [ | Clinical Study | The food industry has intensified online advertising focused on children during COVID-19 pandemic, helping the widespread of weight gain. |
| Diet | Khajeheian D. et al. [ | Clinical Study | Students, in primary school and high school, who spend more time using social media, exhibit a greater increase in BMI. |
| Diet | Mazur A. et al. [ | Clinical Study | Obesity correlated to junk food advertisement and a more sedentary lifestyle promoted by social media use. Poor or deregulated sleep affects the regulation of energy balance representing a risk factor for childhood obesity. |
| Diet | Custers K. et al. [ | Review | Raising in the presence of pro-eating disorder content on websites and social media, which correlates of eating disturbances. |
| Diet | Borzekowski D.L.G. et al. [ | Review | Constant media access and exposure to unhealthy and risky media messages may increase the interactions, facilitating cyberbullying and exacerbating body image apprehension promoting poor nutrition, psychological problems, and leading to a more sedentary lifestyle. |
| Diet | Moorman E.L. et al. [ | Clinical Study | Greater use the internet sources for nutritional information is related to greater disordered eating. |
| Diet | Purves R.I. et al. [ | Clinical Study | Alcohol brands on social media portray drinking identities, appealing for young adolescent and with the potential risk to peer group acceptance. |
Social media and cyberbullying.
| Domains | Reference | Type of Publication | Highlighted |
|---|---|---|---|
| Depression | Chassiakos Y.L.R. et al. [ | Review | Risks of media device use include obesity, sleep, attention, and learning impairment, illicit substance use, high-risk sexual behaviors, depression, cyberbullying, and compromised privacy and confidentiality. |
| Depression | Maurer B.T. et al. [ | Review | An increase in digital and social media use relates to physical and mental status impairment in children, including depression, anxiety, cyberbullying, sleep disturbance, behavioral problems, sexting, and myopia. |
| Depression | Richards D. et al. [ | Review | Social media overuse impacts on mental health, self-esteem, and wellbeing. |
| Depression | Hadjipanayis A. et al. [ | Review | Social media use facilitates socialization, communication, learning skills, and may positively affect education. Potential risks include cyberbullying, Facebook depression, sleep disturbances, and sexting. |
| Depression | Hamm M.P. et al. [ | Review | Cyberbullying and depression correlate with a regular and constant social media use. |
| Depression | Carpenter L.M. et al. [ | Review | Internet, mobile devices, and social networking sites link to mental health impairment and cyberbullying. |
| Depression | Aboujaoude E. et al. [ | Review | Internet penetrance and connectivity are strictly related to cyberbullying and altered mental status. |
| Diet | Borzekowski D.L.G. et al. [ | Review | Constant media access and exposure to unhealthy and risky media messages may increase the interactions, facilitating cyberbullying and exacerbating body image apprehension promoting poor nutrition, psychological problems, and leading to a more sedentary lifestyle. |
| Cyberbullying | Wise J. et al. [ | Letter to Editor | Potential negative effects of social media include damage to sleep patterns, cyberbullying, and online grooming. |
| Cyberbullying | Bozzola E. et al. [ | Review | Cyberbullying, sleep impairment, psychological problems, addiction, musculoskeletal disorders, and eye problems are among the risks of media device use in adolescence. |
| Cyberbullying | Shah J. et al. [ | Review | Increased social media usage correlates with decreased self-esteem and body satisfaction, increment of cyberbullying, and exposure to pornographic material and risky sexual behaviors. |
| Cyberbullying | O’Keeffe G.S. et al. [ | Editorial | Risks of social media overuse include sexting, cyberbullying, privacy issues, and Internet addiction, all of which may present with vague health symptoms. |
| Cyberbullying | Nagata J.M. et al. [ | Editorial | More than 7% of adolescents have problematic media use and addiction to social media. Problematic media use is associated with cyberbullying, poor outcomes in life satisfaction, and mental health. |
| Cyberbullying | Marengo N. et al. [ | Clinical study | The risk of cyber-victimization is higher in case of problematic social media use and in female gender. |
| Cyberbullying | Uludasdemir D. et al. [ | Clinical study | Having daily access to the Internet and the sharing of gender on social media increased the likelihood of cyber victimization. |
Social media and psychological problems.
| Domains | Reference | Type of Article | Highlighted |
|---|---|---|---|
| Depression | Mougharbel F. et al. [ | Review | High levels of screen time and social media use correlates to depression, anxiety, misperception of body image, and mental health outcomes. |
| Depression | Keles B. et al. [ | Review | Time spent on social media, repetitive activities, addictive, or problematic use associated with depression, anxiety, and psychological impairment. Nevertheless, it is not possible to establish whether a causative effect exists. |
| Depression | Chen I.H. et al. [ | Review | During school closure in COVID-19 pandemic smartphone and social media use increased. An increase of 15–30 min daily negatively affected mental health status in children. |
| Diet | Borzekowski D.L.G. et al. [ | Review | Constant media access and exposure to unhealthy and risky media messages may increase the interactions, facilitating cyberbullying and exacerbating body image apprehension promoting poor nutrition, psychological problems, and leading to a more sedentary lifestyle. |
| Cyberbullying | Bozzola E. et al. [ | Review | Cyberbullying, sleep impairment, psychological problems, addiction, musculoskeletal disorders, and eye problems are among the risks of media device use in adolescence. |
| Cyberbullying | Nagata J.M. et al. [ | Editorial | More than 7% of adolescents have problematic media use and addiction to social media. Problematic media use is associated with cyberbullying, poor outcomes in life satisfaction, and mental health. |
| Psychological problems | Favotto L. et al. [ | Clinical study | Children with low family communication have high levels of media use and loneliness. |
| Psychological problems | Boer M. et al. [ | Clinical study | Data among 154,981 adolescents of the world, described that problematic media use is associated with lower well-being. |
| Psychological problems | Buda G. et al. [ | Clinical study | Problematic social media use correlates with about two times higher odds for worse sleep quality and lower life satisfaction, and it is related to lower levels of vigorous physical activity in girls. |
| Psychological problems | Mc Dool E. et al. [ | Clinical study | Among 6300 English students, internet use is negatively associated with feel about appearance, especially in girls. |
| Psychological problems | Twigg L. et al. [ | Clinical study | Higher levels of social media use are associated with lower happiness, especially in girls. |
| Psychological problems | Walsh S.D. et al. [ | Clinical study | Problematic social media use such as substance use, bullying, and low social support, have been identified as clusters of risk for children mental health. |
| Psychological problems | Sümen A. et al. [ | Clinical study | Social media addiction in school students is related with lower communication among families, loneliness, emotional problems, attention deficit, peer problems, and it decreases students’ sleep efficiency. |
| Psychological problems | Marino C. et al. [ | Clinical study | Adolescent problematic Internet users have higher levels of somatic symptoms such as headaches and psychological consequences of social media use such as loss of control and relational problems with family and friends. |
Social media and sleep.
| Domains | Reference | Type of Article | Highlighted |
|---|---|---|---|
| Depression | Hoge E. et al. [ | Review | The more time adolescents spend on smartphone, the higher levels of depression, insomnia, and anxiety are found one year later. |
| Depression | Chassiakos Y.L.R. et al. [ | Review | Risks of media device use include obesity, sleep, attention, and learning impairment, illicit substance use, high-risk sexual behaviors, depression, cyberbullying, and compromised privacy and confidentiality. |
| Depression | Maurer B.T. et al. [ | Review | An increase in digital and social media use relates to physical and mental status impairment in children, including depression, anxiety, cyberbullying, sleep disturbance, behavioral problems, sexting, and myopia. |
| Depression | Hadjipanayis A. et al. [ | Review | Social media use facilitates socialization, communication, learning skills, and may positively influence education. Potential risks include cyberbullying, Facebook depression, sleep disturbances, and sexting. |
| Depression | Armitage R.C. et al. [ | Letter | The degree of social media usage in children correlates with depression, anxiety, and perceived stress level. Bedtime access to and use of mobile devices is significantly associated with inadequate sleep in terms of quality and quantity. |
| Diet | Mazur A. et al. [ | Clinical study | Obesity correlated to junk food advertisement and a more sedentary lifestyle promoted by social media use. Poor or deregulated sleep affects the regulation of energy balance representing a risk factor for childhood obesity. |
| Diet | Purves R.I. et al. [ | Letter | Potential negative effects of social media include damage to sleep patterns, cyberbullying, and online grooming. |
| Cyberbullying | Bozzola E. et al. [ | Review | Cyberbullying, sleep impairment, psychological problems, addiction, musculoskeletal disorders, and eye problems are among the risks of media device use in adolescence. |
| Psychological problems | Buda G. et al. [ | Clinical study | Problematic social media use correlates with about two times higher odds for worse sleep quality and lower life satisfaction, and it is related to lower levels of vigorous physical activity in girls. |
| Psychological problems | Sümen A. et al. [ | Clinical study | Social media addiction in school students is related with lower communication among families, loneliness, emotional problems, attention deficit, peer problems, and it decreases students’ sleep efficiency. |
| Sleep | Varghese N.E. et al. [ | Clinical study | Exposure to media device and social media is significantly associated with adolescent sleep-onset difficulties. |
| Sleep | Guerrero M.D. et al. [ | Clinical study | Time spent on screen has been associated to sleeping problems, especially sleep duration, and with problematic behaviors, higher internalizing, and externalizing symptoms. |
| Sleep | Lund L. et al. [ | Review | Relationship between social media use, late sleep onset, sleep quality, and duration. |
Social media and addiction.
| Domains | Reference | Type of Article | Highlighted |
|---|---|---|---|
| Depression | Chiu M. et al. [ | Clinical Study | Social media increased use correlates to Emergency Department visits for mental illness, including depression, addiction, and anxiety. |
| Depression | Mougharbel F. et al. [ | Review | High levels of screen time and social media use correlates to depression, anxiety, and misperception of body image, addiction, and mental health outcomes. |
| Depression | Khalil S.A. et al. [ | Clinical Study | A percentage of 65.6% of Egyptians adolescents are having internet addiction, especially Facebook addiction (92.8%) and gaming (61.3%). Those affected by Facebook addiction are at risk of dysthymia. |
| Cyberbullying | Bozzola E. et al. [ | Review | Cyberbullying, sleep impairment, psychological problems, addiction, musculoskeletal disorders, and eye problems are among the risks of media device use in adolescence. |
| Cyberbullying | O’Keeffe G.S. et al. [ | Editorial | Risks of social media overuse include sexting, cyberbullying, privacy issues, and Internet addiction, all of which may present with vague health symptoms. |
| Cyberbullying | Nagata J.M. et al. [ | Editorial | More than 7% of adolescents have problematic media use and addiction to social media. Problematic media use is associated with cyberbullying, poor outcomes in life satisfaction, and mental health. |
| Addiction | Hawi N.S. et al. [ | Clinical Study | The Digital Addiction Scale for Children was validated on 822 participants, to assess the behavior of children 9 to 12 years old in association with video gaming, social media, and texting. Females are more susceptible to social media addiction. |
| Addiction | Turhan P. et al. [ | Clinical Study | Among a group of 93 adolescents with substance abuse, social media addiction and gaming disorders have been documented more than control group. |
| Addiction | Emond A.M. et al. [ | Review | Gambling and gaming addiction are emerging problems in children and adolescents. Children are exposed to gambling adverts using media device and television. Moreover, social media sometimes promotes gambling. |
| Addiction | Unger J.B. et al. [ | Clinical Study | Tobacco use in adolescents correlates to tobacco content on social media. In particular, adolescents with more tobacco tweets were more likely to use cigarettes. Advertising messages about tobacco shared trough social media have been connected to tobacco use in adolescents. |
Social media and anxiety.
| Domains | Reference | Type of Publication | Highlighted |
|---|---|---|---|
| Depression | Chiu M. et al. [ | Clinical Study | Social media increased use correlates to Emergency Department visits for mental illness, including depression, addiction, and anxiety. |
| Depression | Rutter L.A. et al. [ | Clinical Study | Social media use correlates with depressive symptoms, anxiety, and loneliness. Physical activity negatively correlates with depression. |
| Depression | Mougharbel F. et al. [ | Review | High levels of screen time and social media use correlates to depression, anxiety, and misperception of body image, addiction, and mental health outcomes. |
| Depression | Hoge E. et al. [ | Review | The more time adolescents spend on smartphone, the higher levels of depression, insomnia, and anxiety are found one year later. |
| Depression | Maurer B.T. et al. [ | Review | An increase in digital and social media use relates to physical and mental status impairment in children, including depression, anxiety, cyberbullying, sleep disturbance, behavioral problems, sexting, and myopia. |
| Depression | Keles B. et al. [ | Review | Time spent on social media, repetitive activities, addictive or problematic use associated with depression, anxiety, and psychological impairment. Nevertheless, it is not possible to establish whether a causative effect exists. |
| Depression | Armitage R.C. et al. [ | Letter | The degree of social media usage in children correlates with depression, anxiety, and perceived stress level. Bedtime access to and use of mobile devices is significantly associated with inadequate sleep in terms of quality and quantity. |
| Depression | Caffo E. et al. [ | Review | Many factors including isolation, excessive social media use and parental stress worsened mental status health during COVID-19 era. |
| Depression | Chen I.H. et al. [ | Review | During school closure in COVID-19 pandemic smartphone and social media use increased. An increase of 15–30 min daily negatively influenced mental health status in children. |
| Anxiety | Muzaffar N. et al. [ | Clinical Study | Increased anxiety correlates with increased Facebook use and repetitive behavior on social media among adolescents. |
Social media and sex related problems.
| Domains | Reference | Type of Publication | Highlighted |
|---|---|---|---|
| Depression | Chassiakos Y.L.R. et al. [ | Review | Risks of media device use include obesity, sleep, attention, and learning impairment, illicit substance use, high-risk sexual behaviors, depression, cyberbullying, and compromised privacy and confidentiality. |
| Depression | Maurer B.T. et al. [ | Review | An increase in digital and social media use relates to physical and mental status impairment in children, including depression, anxiety, cyberbullying, sleep disturbance, behavioral problems, sexting, and myopia. |
| Depression | Hadjipanayis A. et al. [ | Review | Social media use facilitates socialization, communication, learning skills, and may positively affect education. Potential risks include cyberbullying, Facebook depression, sleep disturbances, and sexting. |
| Cyberbullying | Shah J. et al. [ | Review | Increased social media usage correlates with decreased self-esteem and body satisfaction, increment of cyberbullying, exposure to pornographic material, and risky sexual behaviors. |
| Cyberbullying | O’Keeffe G.S. et al. [ | Editorial | Risks of social media overuse include sexting, cyberbullying, privacy issues, and Internet addiction, all of which may present with vague health symptoms. |
| Sex related problems | Gazendam N. et al. [ | Clinical Study | Sexual activity has been described in a sample of 7882 Canadian students. An increase of sexual activity has been observed in both girls and boys using media. A great social media use has been connected to the strongest association with early sexual activity for girls (RR = 1.42, 95% CI: 1.01–1.47). |
| Sex related problems | Wana G. et al. [ | Clinical Study | Social media use has been described as a risk factor for sexual behavior. About 7% of adolescents use media to watch pornographic content. |
| Sex related problems | Solecki S. et al. [ | Clinical Study | Addictive, smart phone activities of youth is directly affecting their perception of the body, also causing physical problems, eye diseases, headache, and exposure to unwanted sexual material online. |
| Sex related problems | Collins R.L. et al. [ | Clinical Study | Traditional media and social media use among adolescents are related to sexual activities and behavior. Video games contain sexual contents. New technologies facilitate pornography access among young. |
Social media and behavioral problems.
| Domains | Reference | Type of Publication | Highlighted |
|---|---|---|---|
| Depression | Maurer B.T. et al. [ | Review | An increase in digital and social media use relates to physical and mental status impairment in children, including depression, anxiety, cyberbullying, sleep disturbance, behavioral problems, sexting, and myopia. |
| Cyberbullying | Bozzola E. et al. [ | Review | Cyberbullying, sleep impairment, psychological problems, addiction, musculoskeletal disorders, and eye problems are among the risks of media device use in adolescence. |
| Sleep | Guerrero M.D. et al. [ | Clinical Study | Time spent on screen has been associated to sleeping problems, especially sleep duration, and with problematic behaviors, higher internalizing, and externalizing symptoms. |
| Behavioral problems | McNamee P. et al. [ | Clinical Study | Excessive time of media use has a strong association with emotional distress and worse behavioral outcomes. |
| Behavioral problems | Okada S. et al. [ | Clinical Study | Association between hours of media use and behavioral problems has been documented among children aged 9–10 years old, in Japan. |
| Behavioral problems | Tahir A. et al. [ | Clinical Study | Regression analysis predicted a strong positive association of exposure to violent social/electronic media content with level of aggression of adolescents (β = 0.43). |
| Behavioral problems | Deslandes S.F. et al. [ | Clinical Study | Online challenges are a powerful communicative resource but can involve potential self-inflicted injuries to participants, with risks ranging from minor to lethal. |
Social media and body image.
| Domains | Reference | Type of Publication | Highlighted |
|---|---|---|---|
| Depression | Mougharbel F. et al. [ | Review | High levels of screen time and social media use correlates to depression, anxiety, and misperception of body image, addiction, and mental health outcomes. |
| Depression | Richards D. et al. [ | Review | Social media overuse impacts on mental health, self-esteem, and wellbeing. |
| Diet | Borzekowski D.L.G. et al. [ | Review | Constant media access and exposure to unhealthy and risky media messages may increase the interactions, facilitating cyberbullying and exacerbating body image apprehension promoting poor nutrition, psychological problems, and leading to a more sedentary lifestyle. |
| Diet | Moorman E.L. et al. [ | Clinical Study | Greater use the internet sources for nutritional information is related to greater disordered eating. |
| Cyberbullying | Shah J. et al. [ | Review | Increased social media usage correlates with decreased self-esteem and body satisfaction, increment of cyberbullying, exposure to pornographic material, and risky sexual behaviors. |
| Sex related problems | Solecki S. et al. [ | Review | Addictive, smart phone activities of youth is directly affecting their perception of the body, also causing physical problems, eye diseases, headache, and exposure to unwanted sexual material online. |
Social media and physical activity.
| Domains | Reference | Type of Publication | Highlighted |
|---|---|---|---|
| Diet | Borzekowski D.L.G. et al. [ | Review | Constant media access and exposure to unhealthy and risky media messages may increase the interactions, facilitating cyberbullying, and exacerbating body image apprehension promoting poor nutrition, psychological problems, and leading to a more sedentary lifestyle. |
| Cyberbullying | Bozzola E. et al. [ | Review | Cyberbullying, sleep impairment, psychological problems, addiction, musculoskeletal disorders, and eye problems are among the risks of media device use in adolescence. |
| Psychological problems | Buda G. et al. [ | Clinical Study | Problematic social media use correlates with about two times higher odds for worse sleep quality and lower life satisfaction, and it is related to lower levels of vigorous physical activity in girls. |
| Sex related problems | Solecki S. et al. [ | Review | Addictive, smart phone activities of youth is directly influencing their perception of the body, also causing physical problems, eye diseases, headache, and exposure to unwanted sexual material online. |
| Physical activity | Kemp B.J. et al. [ | Clinical Study | Australian children between 11 y and 13 y who had a larger increase in social media use had lower participation in overall physical activity. |
Social media and online grooming.
| Domains | Reference | Type of Publication | Highlighted |
|---|---|---|---|
| Depression | Chassiakos Y.L.R. et al. [ | Review | Risks of media device use include obesity, sleep, attention, and learning impairment, illicit substance use, high-risk sexual behaviors, depression, cyberbullying, and compromised privacy and confidentiality. |
| Diet | Purves R.I. et al. [ | Letter | Potential negative effects of social media include damage to sleep patterns, cyberbullying, and online grooming. |
| Online grooming | Forni G. et al. [ | Review | This review describes the online grooming phenomenon, victim and perpetrators characteristics, and the importance to implement attention on this problem with preventive measures. |
Social media and sight.
| Domains | Reference | Type of Publication | Highlighted |
|---|---|---|---|
| Depression | Maurer B.T. et al. [ | Review | An increase in digital and social media use relates to physical and mental status impairment in children, including depression, anxiety, cyberbullying, sleep disturbance, behavioral problems, sexting, and myopia. |
| Cyberbullying | Bozzola E. et al. [ | Review | Cyberbullying, sleep impairment, psychological problems, addiction, musculoskeletal disorders, and eye problems are among the risks of media device use in adolescence. |
| Sex related problems | Solecki S. et al. [ | Review | Addictive, smart phone activities of youth is directly influencing their perception of the body, also causing physical problems, eye diseases, headache, and exposure to unwanted sexual material online. |
Social Media and headache.
| Domains | Reference | Type of Publication | Highlighted |
|---|---|---|---|
| Psychological problems | Marino C. et al. [ | Clinical Study | Adolescent problematic Internet users have higher levels of somatic symptoms such as headaches and psychological consequences of social media use such as loss of control and relational problems with family and friends. |
| Sex related problems | Solecki S. et al. [ | Review | Addictive, smart phone activities of youth is directly influencing their perception of the body, also causing physical problems, eye diseases, headache, and exposure to unwanted sexual material online. |
| Headache | Çaksen H. et al. [ | Review | Abuse of electronic screens more than 2 h contributes to the chance of reporting headache. |
Social media and dental caries.
| Domains | Reference | Type of Publication | Highlighted |
|---|---|---|---|
| Diet | Radesky J. et al. [ | Clinical Study | Exposure to advertising is associated with unhealthy behaviors. Children are uniquely vulnerable to the persuasive effects of advertising because of immature critical thinking skills and impulse inhibition. Ads also promote intake of foods that contribute to dental caries. |
| Dental Caries | Almoddahi D. [ | Clinical Study | Study conducted in England, Wales, and Northern Ireland. Excessive internet use is associated to dental caries, and this could be mediated by health behaviors. |