Anxiety, depression: Less social media use can improve symptoms

Evan Walker
Evan Walker TheMediTary.Com |
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Research shows that a reduction in social media use can improve mental health. Image Credit: Olga Pankova/Getty Images
  • Cutting back on social media for a week resulted in less anxiety, depression, and insomnia for participants in a new study.
  • Extensive social media engagement is viewed as potentially damaging to mental health, although its use is widespread and growing.
  • Experts say that scrolling through social media feeds risks replacing real-world experiences, which are more likely to be protective of mental well-being.

For young adults, cutting back on social media for a week resulted in a significant reduction in anxiety, depression, and insomnia in a new study published in JAMA Network Open.

Participants in the study reported 16% fewer anxiety symptoms, 24.8% fewer symptoms of depression, and 14.5% less insomnia.

The study involved 373 individuals ages 18 to 24, each of whom was paid $150 to participate. Of the cohort, 277 were female, 73 were male, 12 were non-binary, 9 were transgender, and 2 were listed as ‘Other’.

Five platforms were of special interest to the study authors:

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Snapchat
  • TikTok
  • X

Participants were allowed to reduce their screen time as they saw fit. They reduced their use across all platforms. However, Instagram and Snapchat were the platforms with the highest rates of continued use. Individuals were more likely to forgo TikTok than Instagram or Snapchat. Facebook and X were the platforms most likely to be visited less during the study.

The study’s findings join an ongoing conversation among experts regarding the effects of screen time and social media on mental health, particularly for young adults and teens.

A meta-study published in June 2025 found widespread evidence that taking a break from social media can be beneficial in general.

Nidhi Gupta, MD, of the Phreedom Foundation, has written extensively about how a mobile device can promote mental health issues. She wasn’t involved in the study.

Social media, while it can help one connect with others, can also take an emotional toll if one is not cautious.

“Upward social comparison,” said Gupta, “i.e., comparing oneself to idealized portrayals of others’ bodies and lives, contributes to low self-esteem, anxiety, and depressive symptoms.”

With platform algorithms optimized to keep audiences engaged, many find themselves missing out on real-world experiences as they continue scrolling, “blunting the emotional benefits of actual interactions,” Gupta added.

As those algorithms improve, it becomes increasingly likely that a focus on social media diverts attention from other, potentially more positive and productive real-life events.

Gupta also pointed out that physical activity becomes less likely when one is glued to a screen, resulting in the loss of mood-enhancing endorphins.

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