Overall, 75 per cent of girls and 70 per cent of boys had at least one social media account, and 52 per cent of girls reported at least one disordered eating behaviour along with 45 per cent of the boys, according to the report in the International Journal of Eating Disorders.
“We suspect that social media use is encouraging young people to compare themselves to their peers and others, particularly on their appearance, at an age where adolescents are very vulnerable to peer influences,” said study leader Simon Wilksch of Flinders University in Adelaide, Australia.
“Young people could be taking on board the message that ‘how I look is key to how worthwhile I am’ leading them to go to unhelpful lengths to try to reach an ideal look,” Wilksch said by email.
The study focused on two main issues related to disordered eating: how teens thought about their bodies and about eating, and whether teens exhibited disordered eating behaviours like skipping meals or exercising excessively.
When it came to “cognition,” or how often teens worried about things like their shape or eating habits, girls who used Snapchat were 39 per cent more likely to report these issues than girls who didn’t use that platform. Tumblr was associated with a 43 per cent higher likelihood of eating-related cognition issues.
Among boys, all four social media platforms were associated with greater cognition issues. The increased risk ranged from 24 per cent for Snapchat to 53 per cent for Tumblr.
Compared to girls without social media accounts, girls with two or more were over three times more likely to report disordered eating behaviours.
Boys with three or four accounts, meanwhile, were more than five times as likely to report disordered eating behaviours as boys without social media accounts.
The study wasn’t designed to prove whether social media use directly contributes to body image problems or eating disorders. “It is safe to say that social media use is complicated, ever changing, and has not only provided a new platform for social interaction, but has likely changed teen social interaction,” said C Alix Timko, a psychologist at the Eating Disorder Assessment and Treatment Program at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, who wasn’t involved in the study.
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