Skip to main content

How a tiny social media break can give you surprisingly big health benefits

Promotional image for Tech For Change. Person standing on solar panel looking at sunset.
This story is part of Tech for Change: an ongoing series in which we shine a spotlight on positive uses of technology, and showcase how they're helping to make the world a better place.

Social media is not the healthiest recreational activity out there; I can personally vouch for that. Aside from a ton of independent research that has established a clear link between social media usage and a deteriorating graph of mental health, leading to depression, anxiety, bogus trends, and rampant misinformation are even known to spur self-harm tendencies among users.

To make matters worse, social media platforms don’t make it any easier. The algorithms lean on the addictive side of online content consumption and try to keep users hooked with an endless barrage of interest-based recommendations. For a lot of users, that translates to hours lying idle and doom-scrolling on their phone screens.

Cartoon characters hooked to their phone.
Dall-E / OpenAI

But it seems cutting down on your daily social media surfing time is not only good for your mental health but also your physical well-being. Published in the Journal of Technology in Behavior Science, new research from Swansea University suggests that reducing the time spent on social media surfing by as little as 15 minutes offers a tangible improvement in physical health.

Recommended Videos

As part of the research, experts from Swansea University’s Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences asked participants aged 20 to 25 to submit weekly reports about their physical and psychological health after cutting down on their social media activity. Users that followed the suggestion reported “an average 15% improvement in immune function, including fewer colds, flu, warts, and verrucae.”

Please enable Javascript to view this content

It works better than expected

Using the Twitter app on the Xiaomi 13 Pro.
Andy Boxall/Digital Trends

Most people go on social media binge sessions in sedentary scenarios, like lying on a bed or a couch. So, can we infer that by cutting down on social media usage, people spent that time on some other activity or just gave their bodies more rest, and that’s what contributed to their physical well-being — right?

“It is a reasonable assumption that cutting down social media use allows other activities to be undertaken, which may be healthier. We don’t really know that; it may be, or the effects on improved health could be from reduced stress associated with not using social media,” Professor Phil Reed from Swansea University’s Department of Psychology told Digital Trends. “Letting them be free to choose what to do with their extra time is much more effective,” he adds.

In addition to improved physical health, participants that reduced their social media activity also reported a 50% improvement in the quality of their sleep quality and a 30% reduction in depressive symptoms. In fact, the test was so effective that folks that were asked to cut down social media time by 15 minutes each day actually ended up reducing their social media exposure by roughly 40 minutes.

Some rogue behavior, too

A black and white picture of cartoon characters looking at their phones.
Dalle-E/OpenAI

When asked whether this was the first study of its kind to establish a link between reduced social media usage and physical wellness, Professor Reed responded affirmatively. “I believe that this is the first study of its kind to establish a clear link between reduced social media usage and physical well-being. Several others have looked at the effect of reducing social media use on psychological wellbeing, but not on physical wellbeing,” he told Digital Trends.

However, one aspect still remains unsolved — establishing a direct correlation between social media use and health issues, or whether changes in well-being variables, such as depression, or other factors (such as an increase in physical activity), are the agents that catalyze the positive changes. What’s certain is that the net impact is positive.

Conducted over a period of three months, the study also arrived at a surprising conclusion. As per the research, telling people to reduce their social media screen time by a fixed duration and spending that time engaged in other activities actually had the opposite effect. This group ended up increasing their social media surfing duration by an even bigger margin than the advised cutback.

So, at the end of the day, here’s the conclusion. Trimming down your social media consumption by a packet as small as 15 minutes could result in “less social media dependence, and improved general health and immune functioning, as well as reduced feelings of loneliness and depression.”

A condensed version of the study can be read on the Swansea University website, while the full research paper is also available.

Nadeem Sarwar
Nadeem is a tech journalist who started reading about cool smartphone tech out of curiosity and soon started writing…
The OnePlus 13 is coming on January 7 — along with a surprise
The OnePlus logo on the back of the OnePlus Open Apex Edition.

It's official: the OnePlus 13 will launch on January 7, 2025. Preempting the anticipated event by several weeks, OnePlus has officially confirmed the date we’ll see its next major smartphone release outside of China. Additionally, it has revealed some key features and news of a surprise new launch to go along with the phone.

OnePlus will release the OnePlus 13 in three different colors — Black Eclipse, Arctic Dawn, and Midnight Ocean. It’s the latter that is likely to be the model to have, as it is wrapped in a material called micro-fiber vegan leather, which is apparently corrosion and scratch-resistant but still luxurious to the touch. For the Arctic Dawn phone, the glass will have a special coating to give it a silky-smooth finish. It’s likely these are the same colors offered in China, where the phone has already been announced, just with different names.

Read more
I’m really worried about the future of smart glasses
The front of the Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses.

The Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses are among the most interesting, unexpectedly fun, and surprisingly useful wearables I’ve used in 2024. However, as we go into 2025, I’m getting worried about the smart glasses situation.

This isn’t the first time I’ve felt like we’re on the cusp of a new wave of cool smart eyewear products, only to be very disappointed by what came next.
Why the Ray-Ban Meta are so good

Read more
We need to talk about this fantastic, industry-leading Motorola collab
A person holding the Motorola Edge 50 Neo.

We are accustomed to tech brands partnering with adjacent brands, whether it’s OnePlus with Hasselblad or Honor and Huawei with Porsche Design, and often — such as with Xiaomi and Leica — singing the praises of the resulting collaborations. But not enough has been said about Motorola’s now established partnership with color experts Pantone.

It was when the recently released Motorola Edge 50 Neo arrived for me to try out that I finally understood how impactful the collaboration has become. Why? It manages to make even ordinary colors look fantastic.
Boring gray?

Read more