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Scroll and Behold: Is Doomscrolling Reprogramming Young Brains?


Updated: May 25, 2025 05:41

Image Source: The Guardian
The rise of doomscrolling—addictively consuming bad news and social media—may be reshaping the brains of youth in profound ways. Not a clinical disorder, research in 2025 links this addictive habit with a host of cognitive and emotional challenges in children, teens, and young adults.
 
Doomscrolling trains the brain to anticipate fleeting, instant updates, which lowers attention span and makes it harder for young people to focus on complex tasks or deep thinking. The constant fare of dire headlines and misinformation can reinforce catastrophic thinking, intensify anxiety and depression, and even foster emotional numbness or desensitization. Experts warn that this loop of negativity inundates the adolescent brain, causing cognitive fatigue, memory impairment, and impaired decision-making capacity.
 
Physically, doomscrolling is associated with broken sleep, headaches, and increased stress hormones—effects that can further impair learning and healthy growth. Socially, it can leave children feeling lonely, even as they are hyperconnected online.
 
Kids and teenagers are particularly at risk, without the life experience and coping mechanisms to filter or process the constant flow of information. Psychologists are calling on parents and educators to step in early: promote screen downtime, encourage mindful technology use, and emphasize real-world connections to allow young brains to recover from the digital onslaught.
 
Source: Deccan Herald, The Brain Workshop, Nationwide Children’s, PMC

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