UK Trial to Test Social Media Limits on Teen Mental Health in World-First Study

January 20, 2026
UK Trial to Test Social Media Limits on Teen Mental Health in World-First Study
  • Primary outcomes focus on anxiety and depression, while secondary analyses track sleep, bullying, time with family and friends, and social comparison effects.

  • To capture group dynamics, all students within a given year in a school will experience the same intervention.

  • Experts say the findings could inform policy in the UK and beyond, given the lack of large-scale experimental data on reducing time spent on social media for under-18s.

  • A UK-led IRL (In Real Life) trial at Cambridge will test whether restricting adolescents’ social media use can improve mental health and wellbeing, marking a world-first experimental investigation.

  • The study will involve about 4,000 Bradford pupils aged 12 to 15, assigning a daily time limit for apps and enforcing a 21:00–07:00 social media curfew to see if reduced use affects anxiety, depression, sleep, and social experiences.

  • Professor Amy Orben of Cambridge is leading the project, with Dr. Dan Lewer and collaborators from the Bradford Centre for Health Data Science; the trial is funded by Wellcome Trust.

  • Experts say the goal is to balance online safety with wellbeing, seeking interventions beyond simple bans to support healthy development.

  • Feasibility runs in spring/summer 2026 will precede a six-week full study in autumn/winter 2026, with data analysis targeted for mid-2027 and publication in major journals.

  • The trial will assess a broad range of apps—TikTok, Snapchat, Instagram, Facebook, X, YouTube, Reddit, LinkedIn—and exclude WhatsApp to preserve family communication.

  • Results are planned for summer and will be independent of the UK government’s consultation on a potential under-16s social media ban.

  • Participants will be compared to a control group using social media normally, with six weeks of observation to establish baseline and outcome differences.

  • The study will measure shifts in anxiety, depression, sleep quality, social interactions, wellbeing, and related factors to gauge social media’s impact.

Summary based on 3 sources


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