Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said today that he is ‘very keen’ for the government to tackle addictive features within social media and said the ‘status quo isn’t good enough’.
Earlier this year the Academy of Medical Royal Colleges (AoMRC),a body which represents 23 medical royal colleges and faculties,warned of growing evidence of ‘health harms’ from tech on young people in the UK.
Dr Susie Davies said the answer is not just taking social media away from children,but replacing it with ‘youth clubs and extracurricular activities’.
The GP set up Parents Against Phone Addiction in Young Adults in 2018 to support families in handling phone use among young people.
She said a child or teenager comes into her surgery every day with a mental health problem linked with social media use.
The mum of three teenagers said that while she had raised her kids with limited smartphone access,there could be a ‘tsunami’ of follow-up lawsuits from other young people addicted to social media.
‘Tech companies are finally being held accountable after years of being seemingly untouchable for the content on their platforms,’ she told Metro.
Susie,who said she was delighted with the ruling,added: ‘The state of social media apps means it is just not safe for our young people.
‘It is damaging their well-being. It is very,very hard for them to stop. It is not young people’s fault. Big tech had made it incredibly addictive.’

Dr Susie Davies says that she sees children with mental health problems linked to social media on a daily basis
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