Every child assessed for mental health issues must be asked about their social media use, psychiatrists have been told.
The advice, issued by the Royal College of Psychiatrists, said clinicians should check if youngsters are spending too much time online.
It comes amid growing evidence of possible links between poor mental health and content seen on the internet.
The Royal College of Psychiatrists said clinicians should check if youngsters are spending too much time online (stock image)
Experts estimate the average 14-year-old is now using social media for three to four hours a day.
At this level of use, 27 per cent of youngsters have symptoms of mental health problems – compared to 12 per cent of those who do not use social media at all.
MPs this month said addiction to social media should potentially be classed as a disease as they called for tough new regulations to protect children from an ‘online Wild West’.
They said sites such as Facebook, Twitter and Instagram should be regulated by Ofcom and forced to abide by a statutory code of conduct.
The impact of social media was thrust into the spotlight by the death of 14-year-old Molly Russell, who took her own life after viewing images on Instagram that glamorised self-harm.
The college said such content, or material promoting eating disorders, could have an impact on an existing mental illness.
Conditions such as depression may also make children more likely to spend time online, while use of technology could lead to poor sleep, under-performance at school, behavioural problems and eating issues, it said.
Spending too much time online also limits time for other activities, such as face-to-face conversations with friends and family, the college said.
And it recommends that children stop using gadgets at least an hour before going to bed and avoid using it at mealtimes.
Dr Bernadka Dubicka, of the child and adolescent faculty at the Royal College of Psychiatrists, said: ‘Although we recognise that social media and technology are not primary drivers of mental illness in young people, we know they are an important part of their lives and can be harmful in some situations.
‘As a frontline clinician, I regularly see young people who have deliberately hurt themselves after discussing self-harm techniques online.
‘Clinicians recognise the well-known phenomena of young people copying each other’s harmful behaviour while on inpatient units, but it’s even more worrying to see this replicated in the online world where audiences are so much bigger.
'We’re also finding that some young people report being recommended harmful content; for example, links to websites encouraging weight loss or displaying self-harm after searching for, or clicking on, similar content just once before.’
College president, Professor Wendy Burn, added: ‘We need to be mindful that many young people’s lives are now being dominated by the online world.’
The Government is set to publish a White Paper on forcing social media firms to sign a code of conduct protecting young and vulnerable users.
Emma Thomas, of the Young Minds charity, said: ‘Young people we work with rarely say that social media is the “cause” of mental health conditions, but they say it can heighten problems they are already struggling with, adding to anxiety or making them feel worse when they compare their lives to those of other people.’
Claire Murdoch, of NHS England, said the new guidance should act as a ‘wake-up call’.
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News Photo Mental health doctors told check children's social media use amid concerns of impact of the internet
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