Longitudinal Effects of Adolescent Digital Media Use on Mental Health in Young Adulthood
Caroline S. Watson, Christopher C. Henrich, Dustin M. Long, Aaron D. Fobian

TL;DR
This study finds that patterns of digital media use from adolescence to young adulthood may affect mental health and memory in young adults.
Contribution
The study identifies distinct digital media use trajectories and their associations with mental health outcomes in young adulthood.
Findings
Four trajectory groups of digital media use were identified, with the 'high' group showing decreased short-term memory.
Individuals in the 'decrease' and 'high' groups had significantly higher odds of suicide attempts compared to the 'low' group.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Research on the relationship between digital media use in adolescence and mental health outcomes in young adulthood remains unclear. This study aims to (1) assess how trajectories of digital media use from adolescence to young adulthood predict mental health outcomes and (2) identify factors in adolescence that contribute to digital media use trajectories. Methods: Participants (Mage = 15.53 years; 56.86% female; 66.89% White) from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent and Adult Health database provided digital media use data across Waves I–IV. At Wave I, participants self-reported parental support, family connectedness, face-to-face interactions with peers, and self-esteem. At Wave IV, participants self-reported anxiety and depression diagnoses, depressive symptomology, suicidal ideation and attempts, and short-term and working memory. General linear and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsImpact of Technology on Adolescents · Child Development and Digital Technology · Digital Mental Health Interventions
