How much of the link between screen time and teen depression is explained by sleep?

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Photo by Hitesh Choudhary on Unsplash
Photo by Hitesh Choudhary on Unsplash

Teen girls who spend longer on their phones are likely to have less sleep and of lower quality, which in turn increases their risk of depression symptoms, according to international researchers. The study tracked the screen time, sleep and mental health of 4810 Swedish teens aged 12-16 over a year, and found increased screen time led to worse sleep within three months. For boys, the researchers say screen time was linked directly to higher depressive symptoms over the years, whereas for girls, they say about half of the link between screen time and depression could be explained by poorer sleep duration and quality.

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From: PLOS


Peer-reviewed; observational study; people

Study links teen girls’ screen time to sleep disruptions and depression

The association between screen time and depression may be mediated by poor sleep, the new findings suggest.

Excessive screen time among adolescents negatively impacts multiple aspects of sleep, which in turn increases the risk of depressive symptoms — particularly among girls. That is the conclusion of a new study published this week in the open-access journal PLOS Global Public Health by Sebastian Hökby of Karolinska Institutet, Sweden, and colleagues.

Recently, the Swedish Public Health Agency published recommendations that adolescents use no more than two-to-three hours of daily leisure screen time, partly to promote better sleep. Previous studies have suggested associations between screen time, sleep disruptions, and depression in teens. However, sleep problems and depression often coincide, and the direction of these associations has been unclear.

In the new study, researchers tracked 4,810 Swedish students aged 12-16, collecting data on sleep quality and quantity, depressive symptoms, and screen usage at three timepoints over the course of a year.  

The researchers found that increased screen time led to deteriorated sleep within three months, impacting both the duration and quality of sleep. Screen time was also found to postpone sleep times towards later hours – disrupting multiple aspects of the human sleep-wake cycle at once. Among boys, screen time had a direct adverse effect on depression after twelve months, while among girls the depressive effect was mediated through sleep disturbances. Sleep could explain about half (38%-57%) of the association between screen time and depression in girls. Boys who spent more time on screens also experienced sleep disruptions, but these were not strongly associated to later depression.

The authors summarize: “In this study, we found that adolescents who reported longer screen times also developed poorer sleep habits over time. In turn, this led to increased depression levels, especially among girls.”

They add: “Our results do suggest that less[…] screen time seems healthier, in line with previous World Health Organization statements…if screen times were somehow reduced, for example through public health policies, our results imply that the high burden of depressive states among young Swedish women, and maybe young men, would likely decrease.”

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PLOS Global Public Health
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Organisation/s: Karolinska Institutet, Sweden
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