BBS:      TELESC.NET.BR
Assunto:  Social media should be treated like tobacco
De:       Mike Powell
Data:     Wed, 27 May 2026 08:35:08 -0500
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Social media should be treated like tobacco: health experts say the internet 
is just as bad as smoking for under-16s as UK government edges closer to 
introducing ban

Date:
Tue, 26 May 2026 17:19:39 +0000

Description:
Social media use has been compared to smoking by medical professionals as the 
UK government enters the final stages of its ban consultation.

FULL STORY
Health experts have likened the health risks of social
media use by young people to the dangers of smoking, as the UK government 
moves closer to introducing a social media ban for under-16s. 

The UKs Academy of Medical Royal Colleges says in a report that social media 
use poses significant damage to children who are continuously exposed to 
hateful, addictive and grossly distressing content. The report , submitted as 
part of the governments consultation process, also says social media use by 
young people now sits alongside smoking and wearing seatbelts as a unifying 
force for the medical profession. The report also highlights the 
responsibility of medical professionals in protecting children, saying 
doctors should now be asking children about their screen time and social 
media use when they first assess them. Half of the 454 medical professionals 
surveyed by the academy said they treated a child with social media-linked 
mental ill health at least once a week.

The guidance would make it easier for doctors to quickly assess if a childs 
social media use is excessive and unhealthy, encouraging medical 
professionals to record any long-term health issues that could arise in their 
younger patients. The difference now is that the harm being done to children 
online is not hypothetical  It is immediate, it is documented, and it is 
happening at scale, the report adds. 

One of the leading supporters of government action, former Health Secretary 
Wes Streeting, also said social media should be treated in a similar way to 
tobacco . Its extremely addictive, bad for our health, and big tech is 
borrowing the big tobacco playbook to avoid regulation, he added. 

The governments consultation period, which received contributions from more 
than 70,000 individuals and groups, ends today (May 26), with Technology 
Secretary Liz Kendall telling the BBC : The question isn't whether we're 
going to act  we will. 

She said the government would respond to the consultation over the summer, 
with measures being introduced before the end of the year.

As part of the consultation process, a number of bereaved parents who believe 
social media contributed to the loss of their children will meet with Prime 
Minister Keir Starmer to share their experiences. Starmer was initially 
opposed to an outright ban for under-16s, but has since said he is 
open-minded about enacting stronger measures. Weighing the pros and the cons 
While many parents, family groups, and health professionals favor some form 
of government action, opinion is divided on what form it should take. 

Some argue that imposing a blanket ban for under-16s could backfire and 
actually cause greater harm, as it could cause young people to seek out 
banned content on the dark web, or even leave them unequipped to navigate 
online content when they turn 16.

The chair of the Molly Rose Foundation, Ian Russell, said that instead of an 
outright ban, existing laws should be enforced for a more holistic approach. 
The organization was founded and named after Molly Rose, a teenager who lost 
her life in 2017 after being exposed to harmful content through social media. 

Critics of a blanket ban have pointed to Australia, which introduced a 
wide-ranging crackdown on social media use by young people in December 2025, 
banning children under 16 from holding accounts on major social media 
platforms. 

A recent study conducted by the Molly Rose Foundation revealed that 60% of 
under-16s were still using platforms such as TikTok and Instagram , even 
though these services were required to shut down the accounts of under-age 
users. 

Since that study was published, the UK has been experimenting with 
restrictive features before it considers a wider ban. In March, the UK 
government kick-started a pilot scheme , where it tested screentime limits 
and curfews in 300 teenage homes to trial different kinds of bans. 

To add to this, further restrictive measures are also being considered 
including auto-play functions and infinite scrolling being disabled to stop 
young users from being caught in endless webs of potentially harmful content. 

Link to news story:
https://www.techradar.com/computing/social-media/social-media-should-be-treate
d-like-tobacco-health-experts-say-the-internet-is-just-as-bad-as-smoking-for-u
nder-16s-as-uk-government-edges-closer-to-introducing-ban

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