Social Media Addiction in Teens

Statistics show that social media addiction is on the rise. According to the Pew Research Center, 35 percent of teenagers now describe their use of social media platforms, such as Instagram and TikTok, as “almost constant.”

Unfortunately, chronic social media use goes hand-in-hand with mental health concerns among children and teens because they’re still developing socially and neurologically. The more teens become immersed in social media, the more impact social media use has on mental health and overall well-being.

What Is Social Media Addiction?

Social media addiction is the compulsive urge to access and engage with social media platforms at the expense of attending to other areas of your life. While adults are not immune to the urges of social media use, kids and teens are more susceptible because their neurological development is still progressing, particularly executive functioning and decision-making abilities. As a result, your child may find it more difficult to walk away from social media, even if they realize it isn’t good for them.

Teenagers who are addicted to social media often report:

  • Depression
  • Anxiety
  • Body dysmorphia
  • Eating disorders
  • Loneliness
  • The fear of missing out (FOMO)
  • Isolation
  • Low self-esteem
  • Jealousy
  • Worthlessness
  • Difficulty with personal relationships
  • Suicidal thoughts

Call 800-723-3216 now to see if our law firm can pursue compensation for you and your family. Consultations are free.

Why Is Social Media Addictive?

Zeke DeRose:

So there are a number of things that make social media addicting, but part of it is that the apps are gamified, right? They act as though a similar addiction to alcoholism or gambling, and it sets off a dopamine release that triggers this want for more. And what we’re seeing with social media companies, especially with targeting kids, is they realize that the longer they keep people on an app, the longer they keep you on your iPhone or your iPad, the more addictive it becomes and the more valuable you are for their advertising.

And the things that are more addictive are divisive content, sensational content, sexual content, and violence. And so it’s similar to a slot machine, when you’re pulling the lever on the slot machine, and you’re waiting for that to land, and you’re wondering what is it going to land on? And that anticipation is addicting.

And sometimes what we found, too, or what we’re finding is that delay when you’re scrolling through your feed is not because you have a slow wifi connection or bad service, but it’s intentional to create that delay, to create that anticipation.

Rachel Lanier:

Everybody likes feeling liked, and especially when you are a young person, you’re growing, you’re figuring out kind of who you are and trying to put out a certain version of yourself. And we found that a lot of these social media apps are very tricky, because for younger users, they especially are susceptible to feeling liked, and this is their affirmation and how they get a lot of their self-esteem is when somebody hearts their post or clicks a like button for them. It provides a lot of self-esteem to them.

This is also a huge form of socialization for this group of individuals, especially adolescents. It allows them to feel connected to others. But unfortunately, even though certain things in the apps seem very innocent, we have found that the makers of the apps have intentionally created this addictive system to keep you on the apps as long as possible so that you hopefully make money for them. And it’s a real shame.

Social media addiction is behavioral, but there are also psychological and physical responses involved. Just like with drug and alcohol use, social media use is fueled by the dopamine rush that it provides. Dopamine is a chemical produced by the brain in response to pleasurable events.

The brain’s pleasure center, the amygdala, responds positively to mentions, likes, comments, and other interactions on social media posts. When the brain is rewarded with pleasure, it drives the user to seek that reward repeatedly.

Since your child’s brain is still developing, changes in the brain eventually cause them to begin craving interactions and reactions from others. Your child may crave increasing amounts of social media to experience the same amount of pleasure. The reaction social media addiction produces follows a pattern similar to that of drug addiction.

How Do Algorithms Encourage Social Media Addiction?

The companies hosting these sites have designed their products to foster addictive behavior. Social media platforms personalize a user’s experience by targeting ads and content based on past browsing preferences. Algorithms send similar types of content to the user’s feed to keep them engaged. Companies like Meta, Inc., which owns Facebook and Instagram, rely on this response to keep users on their sites as much as possible so they can generate revenue and make a profit. The downside is that these algorithms expose children and teenagers to the same harmful content over and over again.

For example, when an adolescent girl clicks on an ad or content that promotes weight loss, an algorithm sends more content related to weight loss to her feed. This continual feedback loop makes it difficult to escape from the constant barrage of harmful content promoting exploitable subjects, such as anorexia, drug use, suicide, and pornography.

Perhaps not coincidentally, rates of bullying and teenage suicide have increased in the age of social media. In fact, between 2007 and 2015, the rate of suicide among teenage boys increased by 31 percent, according to The CDC.

Learn more about Meta Platform lawsuits, including the company’s liability in exposing children, teens and young adults to harmful content, as well as compensation for which you may be entitled.

Are Social Media Companies Liable for the Content on Their Apps?

Zeke DeRose:

Social media companies are potentially liable for their bad acts in creating and perpetuating social media addiction because they’re knowing participants. We’ve got information that shows that they realize that the content that they’re feeding or the information that they’re feeding on their apps is dangerous and harmful to minors, and yet they’re misleading parents, they’re misleading society about the ill effects of it. We look at this a little bit as we’ve seen in the opioid epidemic, is that the social media epidemic is being furthered and perpetuated by social media companies, and they’re not taking any steps or any real helpful steps to mitigate the damages.

Rachel Lanier:

Companies have admitted and have documentation that they create algorithms that are targeting children and that are uniquely tailored to push videos toward children that will keep them on the apps longer. And it can lead children especially down a very damaging rabbit hole of pushing content and videos that are really dangerous to them. The companies are doing it on purpose, and that simply enough, is why eventually, they’re going to be found liable for this behavior.

For decades, technology companies relied on Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act to shield themselves from virtually all litigation related to their platforms.

But recently, plaintiff attorneys have successfully advanced a theory that treated social media platforms as defective products under California product liability law, focusing not on the content users posted, but on the design features the companies engineered to maximize engagement.

As a result, The Lanier Law Firm is the first law firm to try a social media addiction case in the nation.

With Mark Lanier and Rachel Lanier as lead counsel, the firm secured a $6 million jury verdict against Meta Platforms Inc. and Google’s YouTube, including punitive damages.

A Los Angeles County Superior Court jury found that both companies deliberately designed addictive social media platforms that caused severe mental health harm to a young woman during her preteen and teenage years.

“For years, social media companies have profited from targeting children while concealing the addictive and dangerous design features built into their platforms. Today, we finally have accountability. These companies made deliberate choices that prioritized engagement and profit over the well-being of the young people using their products. This verdict sends a clear message to an entire industry that the era of operating without consequence is over.

Mark Lanier

What Are the Signs That Your Child Is Addicted to Social Media?

To best protect your child, watch out for some warning signs indicating social media addiction. Does your child need to be on their phone constantly? Do they become inappropriately upset when they can’t check their phone or social media accounts?

If this sounds familiar, you may be dealing with social media addiction. Some of the signs include:

  • An increase in planning and thinking about using social media
  • Mood changes based on social media access
  • A need for more and more social media time
  • Difficulty cutting back on social media, even when they try
  • Social anxiety
  • Withdrawal or isolation from others
  • Avoidance of activities they once enjoyed
  • Poor body image or self-esteem
  • Signs of an eating disorder
  • Depression
  • The use of social media to escape problems
  • Thoughts of self-harm or suicide

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What Are the Effects of Social Media Addiction?

Zeke DeRose:

So there are a number of examples of the negative effects and consequences on young people from social media. One in our case is a seemingly popular, successful football player who on the outside you’d assume had everything going for him and was successful and liked. And when we go back a year into his social media life, you see that he’s being fed perpetually information about suicide, about harming himself, about depression. And he just went down this rabbit hole on this path that led ultimately to suicide. Even though in the real world, not on social media, he had everything going that you and I or any of us would be thinking was just a great life.

We’ve also seen, especially with girls, issues with body dysmorphia, and self-doubt, and depression. And we’re seeing rates of, we’ve got friends, and this is just friends of our family. We’ve also seen, our family has seen friends of ours whose daughter was also just popular at school. An athlete seemingly had everything going for her and by being on social media, she started to have body dysmorphia issues, questions about was she skinny enough? Was she fit enough? Was she popular enough? And ultimately, the family had to intervene and put her in a hospital for eating disorders. And luckily, thankfully she’s on the other side of it, but one thing that was definitely removed was the use of social media.

Data from the National Education Association (NEA) found that social media use is related to negative mental health outcomes in adolescents, including:

  1. Feelings of depression and isolation. Social media content tends to only portray the “highlight reel” of others’ lives instead of the reality. There is a heavy focus on material goods and a particular standard of lifestyle. Teenagers may experience intense pressure to live exciting and flawlessly portrayed lives and feel let down if their own life doesn’t seem to compare to what they see online. A study out of Indiana University found that people with social media accounts believed that others were happier and more successful than they were after spending time looking at social media.
  2. Stunted social skills. Kids and teens are still developing social skills during this time in their lives. Social media creates added pressure to share and keep up with others’ posts. Users may devote so much of their time to posting and replying on social media that they have little time to devote to activities they once enjoyed. Some teenagers develop social anxiety disorder, causing them to withdraw from interactions with the world outside of social media. The younger a person is when habitual social media use begins, the more likely they are to experience problems with social interactions, such as only having online friendships.
  3. Cyberbullying. Cyberbullying is more prevalent than ever, thanks to social media platforms. Online name-calling, rumors, harassment, and sharing explicit photos without another’s permission have become common parts of the teenage experience. Social media’s anonymity and lack of consequences has emboldened bullies and led to young people attempting to end or take their own lives.
  4. Eating disorders. There is a correlation between adolescent girls’ time on social media and negative body image. Content on Instagram is often edited and filtered to project idealistic images of the female body. Instagram’s own internal research found that 32 percent of teenage girls said that when they felt bad about their bodies, looking at Instagram made them feel worse.
  5. Suicidal thoughts. Social media overuse is especially dangerous for children and adolescents who use it to escape from existing feelings of stress, loneliness, and sadness. They often begin to disengage from in-person relationships entirely and may refuse to attend school or spend time with others. This escape from reality can lead to thoughts of self-harm and suicide.

What Types of Social Media Claims Is The Lanier Law Firm Accepting?

Transcript

Rachel Lanier:

The Lanier Law Firm is taking social media addiction cases where sadly, our clients have either suffered from an eating disorder or suffered from suicidal ideation, and unfortunately, in some cases suicide due to the addictive nature of the apps and due to some of the videos that they’re seeing through the apps.

Zeke DeRose:

We’re also representing states and school districts and communities in social media addiction cases. We currently represent the state of Arkansas, and we’re interested in representing other states that might be interested.

Why Should You Contact the Lanier Law Firm?

Addiction resulting from social media use is not accidental. Internal communication at social media platforms like Facebook and Instagram revealed that platform designers purposefully used algorithms to reel in young users and keep them on the sites as long as possible. Social media companies could change their products to be less addictive and safer, but they have resisted doing so. Parents of children and teens harmed by social media addiction are filing lawsuits to hold social media companies accountable.

If your child has been affected by social media addiction, contact The Lanier Law Firm. We genuinely care about you and your child. We offer our clients the support and guidance they need to take the next steps toward justice, and we have a winning record of success, including:

  • The first social media addiction trial jury verdict in the nation: $6 million secured by lead counsel Mark Lanier and Rachel Lanier
  • Over $20 billion in life-changing financial awards for our clients
  • Some of the highest verdicts and settlements in Texas and across the country
  • National recognition for Trial Lawyer of the Year by National Trial Lawyers, Best Law Firm by U.S. News, Elite Trial Lawyers Award by the National Law Journal, and nine attorneys on the Texas Super Lawyers list in 2022

Let our family help your family. Get started today with a free consultation.

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Rachel Lanier
Managing Attorney, Los Angeles

Rachel Lanier is dedicated to pharmaceutical and product liability, helping secure the $4.6 billion verdict in Ingham v. Johnson & Johnson. Recognized by Best Lawyers (2024-2025) for Mass Tort and Personal Injury, Rachel leads the firm’s social media addiction lawsuits and represents clients in high-profile MDLs.

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Lawrence P. Wilson se dedica a lesiones personales, responsabilidad por productos, negligencia médica y ciertos asuntos marítimos. Casos notables: $17.5 millones por lesiones personales y veredicto favorable en Schwab v. Ford Motor Company. Reconocido como Texas Super Lawyer (2012-2021) y en Lawdragon 500 Leading Plaintiff Lawyers.

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Alex Abston se dedica a responsabilidad farmacéutica, por productos y demandas colectivas. Formó parte del equipo que obtuvo uno de los primeros veredictos federales en MDL 2804, In re: National Prescription Opiate Litigation. Honores incluyen Lawdragon 500 Next Generation (2024) y los 40 mejores de Texas menores de 40 (2021-2024).

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Benjamin T. Major se dedica a apelaciones, ayudando a preservar sentencias multimillonarias y asegurar acuerdos favorables. Logros notables incluyen preservar una sentencia por cáncer de ovario y derrotar mociones en litigios antimonopolio y de reclamaciones falsas. Reconocido como Texas Rising Star (2018-2020), entre otros logros.

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Case A. Dam se dedica a exposición al asbesto, representando a clientes con mesotelioma, asbestosis y cánceres relacionados. Ha servido a veteranos, mecánicos automotrices y trabajadores de diversas industrias. Reconocido en el Lawdragon 500 de Abogados de Demandantes Líderes (2024), entre otros logros.

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David L. Rosenband se dedica a responsabilidad farmacéutica, lesiones personales y responsabilidad por productos. Fue Abogado de Enlace en la litigación de Bextra/Celebrex en Nueva York y ayudó a asegurar un veredicto de $9 millones en el caso Accutane de NJ. Reconocido por su trabajo en litigios MDL y en tribunales estatales.

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Evan M. Janush supervisa los litigios por responsabilidad farmacéutica y de productos en litigios masivos en NY. Formó parte del Comité Ejecutivo de Demandantes en MDL 2804 y del equipo de juicio en los casos Vioxx. Reconocido por Best Lawyers en Litigios por Daños Masivos/Demandas Colectivas (2024-2025) y Lawdragon 500 (2020).

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Kevin LaMarca se dedica a exposición al asbesto, lesiones personales y responsabilidad por productos. Obtuvo acuerdos de siete cifras, incluyendo $2.25 millones para la familia de un trabajador de papelería fallecido. Reconocido como Top 40 Under 40 de National Trial Lawyers, representa clientes en tribunales estatales y federales.

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Manny Cabrera se dedica a exposición al asbesto y casos de lesiones catastróficas. Ha representado a clientes en asuntos relacionados con el asbesto, lesiones personales, así como en casos de responsabilidad por camiones y propiedades. Honrado como Top 40 Under 40 de National Trial Lawyers en Litigios Civiles para Demandantes.

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Michael A. Akselrud se dedica a lesiones personales, litigios comerciales y responsabilidad por productos. Parte del equipo de juicio que obtuvo un veredicto de $4.69 mil millones en el caso del talco de Johnson & Johnson. Reconocido por Super Lawyers como Rising Star (2016) y nombrado a LawDragon 500 Leading Plaintiff Lawyers (2020).

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Michelle Greene se dedica a responsabilidad farmacéutica y de productos, con un enfoque en daños tóxicos. Ha representado a clientes en casos de contaminación por AFFF y PFAS. Reconocida por Best Lawyers como “Ones to Watch” (2024-2025) y mencionada en la lista de Next Generation de Lawdragon (2025) en Litigios para Demandantes.

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Patrice McKinney se dedica a lesiones personales, responsabilidad por productos y casos FELA, con enfoque en trabajadores ferroviarios lesionados en el trabajo, colisiones de automóviles y camiones, y lesiones en campos petroleros. Reconocida como Texas Super Lawyer (2017-2024) y Best Lawyers (2024-2025) en Lesiones Personales.

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Rachel Lanier se dedica a responsabilidad farmacéutica y por productos, ayudando a asegurar el veredicto de $4.6 mil millones en Ingham v. Johnson & Johnson. Lidera demandas por adicción a las redes sociales y representa a clientes en MDLs. Reconocida por Best Lawyers (2024-2025) en Daños Masivos y Lesiones Personales.

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Rebecca Phillips se dedica a responsabilidad farmacéutica, litigios comerciales y apelaciones. Co-líder del litigio de Bard Implant, también ayudó a asegurar miles de millones en compensación por opioides para Texas. Honores recientes incluyen Super Lawyers Rising Star y Lawdragon 500 (2024-2025), entre otros.

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Sam es “board-certified” en Derecho de Juicios por Lesiones Personales y Derecho Civil, con más de 30 años de experiencia. Ha llevado a cabo 50+ juicios civiles con jurado, incluyendo casos de mesotelioma y muerte por negligencia. Reconocido como Texas Super Lawyer desde 2008, tiene calificación AV Preeminent por más de 25 años.

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Zeke DeRose se dedica a litigios comerciales, antimonopolio y responsabilidad por productos. Forma parte del equipo legal en un caso antimonopolio contra Google y representa al Estado de Arkansas en litigios contra Meta. Reconocido por Lawdragon 500 (2025) y Best Lawyers (2025), Zeke es miembro del Top 100 de National Trial Lawyers.

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Catherine Heacox se dedica a responsabilidad farmacéutica, lesiones personales y responsabilidad por productos. Reconocida como Super New York Metro Super Lawyer desde el 2013, Catherine tiene una amplia experiencia en litigios de MDL (Litigios Multidistritales) y daños masivos o demandas colectivas.

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La amplia experiencia legal de Richard Meadow abarca múltiples áreas de práctica y jurisdicciones. Es reconocido en Best Lawyers 2025 por su trabajo en Litigios de Responsabilidad por Daños Masivos y Litigios por Lesiones Personales. Con más de tres décadas de experiencia, Richard ha dedicado su carrera a defender los derechos de las personas lesionadas.

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Kelsey Stokes is dedicated to mass tort litigation, product liability, and complex litigation. With extensive experience in trial and settlement negotiations, she continues to be a leader in medical device litigation recognized by Super Lawyers Rising Stars (2022).

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Abogado Senior
Lee Cirsch tiene más de dos décadas de experiencia en juicios de casos de lesiones personales, responsabilidad por productos y litigios comerciales. Su experiencia representando tanto a demandantes como a demandados le otorga una habilidad única para anticipar la estrategia de su oponente, lo que brinda a sus clientes una valiosa ventaja en litigios.