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Mike Males's avatar

Re self-harm among teenage girls. Here are the best data we have from the CDC's massive 2021 survey on the circumstances in which teen girls commit self harm, the only survey that explores that issue. First, in relation to screen time, here's the percentage of teen girls who injuriously harm themselves:

Girls who spend zero or less than 1 hour a day using screens: 9%

Girls who spend 1-2 hours a day screen time: 4%

Girls who spend 3-4 hours a day screen time: 4%

Girls who spend 5+ hours a day screen time: 5%.

Since it's not the use of screens, what, then, could be driving girls to commit more self harm? Here's one possibility: the fact that 62% of girls (including 66% of girls younger than 16) report violent and emotional abuse by parents and household adults. Here are girls' reports of self harm by the level of parental/grownup abuse they suffered:

Girls who report no abuse by adults: 3%

Girls who report occasional emotional abuse by adults: 8%

Girls who report violent and/or frequent emotional abuse by adults: 22%

Social media is not the problem driving girls' self-harm. Abuses by parents and household adults clearly are an important factor, but we need better information to delineate whether abuse itself is increasing, or just parents' soaring drug and alcohol deaths and crises. I would hope you are not going to keep on denying these rising adult troubles could be a major problem in teens' depression and self-harm.

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