Snapchat positively impacts teens’ well-being compared to other platforms


By AGENCY

Social media platforms are not necessarily detrimental to mental health, the study reveals. — AFP

Social networks are often criticised for their negative impact on young people’s mental health, yet some may be less harmful than others.

In fact, a new study reports that Snapchat stands out from the crowd for its positive impact on well-being.

“We found a consistent negative impact of time spent on TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube across all three mental health dimensions.

"Conversely, spending time on Snapchat positively affected friendship closeness and well-being but had no significant impact on self-esteem,” explain researchers at the University of Amsterdam in a paper entitled “Social Media Use Leads to Negative Mental Health Outcomes for Most Adolescents.”

The researchers studied 479 adolescents over 100 days to analyse how the use of social networks – TikTok, Instagram, Snapchat, WhatsApp and YouTube – could affect three key dimensions of teenagers’ mental health: well-being, self-esteem and friendships.

And in their findings, Snapchat came out on top.

Evan Spiegel’s social network appears to be the least harmful social app for teenagers.

When spending time on this social network, 71.5% of teenagers felt a positive impact on their friendships, 41.4% reported positive effects on their well-being and 23.7% on their self-esteem.

While some 60% of the teenagers surveyed said they had experienced mostly negative effects on social networks, 13.6% said they had been stimulated both positively and negatively.

On average, the teenagers surveyed spent two hours 40 minutes a day on the most popular platforms.

A different story for TikTok and YouTube

While Snapchat stands out in particular, the WhatsApp messaging platform also scores well since, according to the report, the platform appears to strengthen friendly relationships without having either negative or positive effects on well-being and self-esteem: “WhatsApp impacted friendship closeness positively for more than three-quarters of adolescents, while a similarly large group experienced no effect on well-being and self-esteem,” the researchers write.

Meanwhile, TikTok and YouTube appear to be the most damaging to the mental health of young users.

“TikTok and YouTube users experienced more negative unity, with over two-thirds experiencing predominantly or exclusively negative effects on the three dimensions of mental health,” the researchers write.

Meanwhile, they continue, “for Instagram, we found slightly fewer negative effects and more null effects across dimensions compared to TikTok and YouTube, but a similarly low number of positive effects (less than 5%).”

Far from lending weight to clichés about platforms only being a source of negative effects, the study shows that not all social networks are necessarily harmful to users’ mental health and friendships. – AFP Relaxnews

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