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American Teens Feel More Peer Pressure to Use Social Media Than to Drink
A poll of 2,000 children aged 11-17 found 44% feel peer pressure to be online, leading to lost sleep, skipped meals and increased stress levels.
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lamplighter
Joined 2013/04/13Visited 2026/04/29
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"Neuroscience explains why teens are so vulnerable to Big Tech social media platforms" theconversation.com/neuroscience ... [image or embed] -- Social Media Lab (@socialmedialab.ca) Apr 4, 2026 at 9:29 AM
"Neuroscience explains why teens are so vulnerable to Big Tech social media platforms" theconversation.com/neuroscience ... [image or embed]
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... Peer pressure isn't what it used to be -- a new study has found more teens feel pressured to be online than they do to smoke, vape, ditch class and even drink. The poll of 2,000 American children aged 11 to 17 found 44% feel peer pressure to be online or on social media. That's compared to other vices, such as smoking and vaping (31%), ditching class (28%), drinking alcohol (24%), shoplifting (13%) and vandalism (8%). The top platforms kids said they have felt pressured to be on are TikTok (44%), Instagram (39%), Facebook (37%), Snapchat (35%), YouTube (34%) and Roblox (24%). Over half (56%) said they've felt left out by friends and peers because they weren't in the same online groups or social media platforms as them. And 36% frequently worry about how many likes, comments, views or reactions they receive on their social posts. Over a third (37%) admit phones and social media posts frequently cause arguments within their friend groups. ...
The poll of 2,000 American children aged 11 to 17 found 44% feel peer pressure to be online or on social media. That's compared to other vices, such as smoking and vaping (31%), ditching class (28%), drinking alcohol (24%), shoplifting (13%) and vandalism (8%).
The top platforms kids said they have felt pressured to be on are TikTok (44%), Instagram (39%), Facebook (37%), Snapchat (35%), YouTube (34%) and Roblox (24%).
Over half (56%) said they've felt left out by friends and peers because they weren't in the same online groups or social media platforms as them. And 36% frequently worry about how many likes, comments, views or reactions they receive on their social posts.
Over a third (37%) admit phones and social media posts frequently cause arguments within their friend groups. ...
#1 | Posted by LampLighter at 2026-04-07 03:27 AM | Reply
Sad
#2 | Posted by Idependant97 at 2026-04-07 11:51 AM | Reply
Get sh4tfaced. It's healthier.
#3 | Posted by Jaspar at 2026-04-07 05:59 PM | Reply
My 12 y/o is only allowed to have a flip-phone, for communication. His friends tease him about it and he's constantly lobbying for a smart phone so he can do social media.
#4 | Posted by TFDNihilist at 2026-04-07 07:52 PM | Reply
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