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Poor screen habits are a key factor behind the terrible sleep and mental health of youngsters, says research

New research identifies 175 connections between screen habits, poor sleep, and mental distress in young adults.

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If you have ever stayed up late scrolling and woken up feeling worse for it, you are not imagining things. A new study from the University of Copenhagen has mapped out exactly why so many young people seem stuck in a cycle of poor sleep and deteriorating mental health.

Researchers identified 29 interconnected factors and 175 causal connections across biological, psychological, and social dimensions that can trap young adults between the ages of 18 and 40 in what they describe as self-reinforcing vicious cycles of mental distress (via EurakAlert).

How do screen habits make things worse?

The research shows that excessive screen time, particularly at night, does not just affect your sleep in isolation. It sets off a chain reaction. Spending more time on social media, streaming platforms, or chatting with an AI can reduce face-to-face interaction, which deepens loneliness.

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That loneliness can trigger depressive symptoms, which in turn make you reach for your phone even more. Meanwhile, nighttime screen use disrupts sleep quality, and poor sleep makes depressive symptoms worse, creating a loop that feeds itself.

The researchers found that late-night screen habits also tend to lead to unhealthy eating, with people turning to calorie-dense snacks as a way of coping with low mood and fatigue. Those dietary changes, combined with ongoing sleep deprivation, can contribute to weight gain and inflammation, which further fuels depression.

Why fixing one bad habit is not enough to break the cycle

The researchers are careful to note that this model is not a finished answer. It does not cover every possible influence, and systematic studies of all 175 connections have not been conducted yet. You can explore the full model through an interactive version available online.

What it does offer is a clearer picture of why telling a young person to simply put their phone down or go to bed earlier rarely works. The problem is not one bad habit. It is a web of habits, emotions, and circumstances that reinforce each other in ways that are genuinely hard to untangle on your own.

Manisha Priyadarshini
Manisha Priyadarshini is a tech and entertainment writer with over nine years of editorial experience.
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