Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
Life

Excessive Facebook Use Makes You Sad, Unhealthy

IANS, 30 May, 2017 12:46 PM
  • Excessive Facebook Use Makes You Sad, Unhealthy
People who check their Facebook profile more often are likely to be sad and unhealthy as compared to those who use the popular social networking site sporadically, a new study warns.
 
Researchers, including those from University of California, San Diego (UCSD) in the US, used data from 5,208 people about their Facebook use between 2013 and 2015.
 
The team investigated the associations of Facebook activity and real-world social network activity with self- reported physical health, mental health, life satisfaction, and body mass index (BMI).
 
After analysing the data the researchers found that increased use of Facebook was "tightly linked to compromised social, physical, and psychological health."   
 
    
 
"People who access the social network more often are not as happy and healthy as the rest of us who choose to use it sporadically," said Holly Shakya, assistant professor at UCSD.
 
Researchers, including Nicholas Christakis from Yale University in the US, found that overall, the use of Facebook was negatively associated with well-being.
 
Even one per cent increase in "likes clicked", "links clicked," or "status updates" was associated with a decrease of five to eight per cent of self-reported mental health, researchers said.
 
The study was published in the American Journal of Epidemiology.

MORE Life ARTICLES

What Teens Want: Gift Ideas From Electronics To Gift Cards To Gym Clothes

What Teens Want: Gift Ideas From Electronics To Gift Cards To Gym Clothes
They are finicky and fickle, and might be updating their wish lists as often as their Instagram accounts. Do you have any idea what to buy the teenagers on your holiday shopping list this year?

What Teens Want: Gift Ideas From Electronics To Gift Cards To Gym Clothes

As Fall Heads Towards Winter, It's Time To Think About How Not To Fall

As Fall Heads Towards Winter, It's Time To Think About How Not To Fall
TORONTO — Deep in the bowels of a building on Toronto's hospital row, some scientists are taking the fall for you, Canada. In fact, over and over again. The researchers are slipping, flailing, losing their balance. It's all in the hope that someday you won't have to.

As Fall Heads Towards Winter, It's Time To Think About How Not To Fall

Had A Rough Year? Think Twice Before Telling The Story In Your Holiday Card

Had A Rough Year? Think Twice Before Telling The Story In Your Holiday Card
For many people, the rules for posting personal news on Facebook, Pinterest and other social media are clear: Put a Good Face on Everything. But that rule doesn't always extend to holiday cards.

Had A Rough Year? Think Twice Before Telling The Story In Your Holiday Card

Stagnant relationships kill pleasant memories

Stagnant relationships kill pleasant memories
While highly committed people remember their relationship history accurately, couples in trouble do not, says new research....

Stagnant relationships kill pleasant memories

Poor societies more likely to believe in gods

Poor societies more likely to believe in gods
Societies living in harsh environments are more likely to believe in gods, says a study, suggesting that societies with less access to food and water are more likely...

Poor societies more likely to believe in gods

Mothers' education key to kid's academic success

Mothers' education key to kid's academic success
Researchers have found that the academic success of your kids depends a lot on the education provided by mothers as children born to relatively older....

Mothers' education key to kid's academic success