Close Menu
  • Home
  • Europe
  • United Kingdom
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Culture
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Tech
  • Travel
Trending

DVLA ‘£1,000 fine’ warning for drivers who don’t take action before deadline

May 19, 2026

Finnish divers recover bodies of two Italians from underwater cave in Maldives

May 19, 2026

Europol disrupts thousands of IRGC online accounts across 19 countries

May 19, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
Se Connecter
May 19, 2026
Euro News Source
Live Markets Newsletter
  • Home
  • Europe
  • United Kingdom
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Culture
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Tech
  • Travel
Euro News Source
Home»United Kingdom
United Kingdom

One in five addicts in rehab now hooked on social media as experts warn of new crisis

News RoomBy News RoomMay 10, 2026
Facebook Twitter WhatsApp Copy Link Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Telegram

The Silent Epidemic: Britain’s “Always-On” Addiction Crisis

In the quiet halls of rehabilitation clinics across Britain, a new and insidious form of addiction is taking hold, one that doesn’t involve a syringe or a bottle but a device most carry in their pockets. Clinic bosses are witnessing a disturbing trend: patients, often seeking help for traditional issues like alcohol or drug misuse, are revealing a deeper, hidden dependency. Many spend upwards of eight hours a day glued to their smartphones, scrolling through social media apps late into the night, oblivious to how much of their lives have been quietly usurped by these digital platforms. This isn’t casual browsing; it’s compulsive use that fuels a surge in insomnia, anxiety, and a profound psychological dependency, marking what experts warn is a national “always-on” addiction crisis.

The Dramatic Rise of Digital Dependency

The scale of this problem is crystallized in new data from The UKAT Group, a major clinic treating over 3,500 addicts annually. Their figures show a startling escalation: one in five patients now suffers from a social media addiction. This represents a dramatic rise from just a single case per month in 2020. The path to this diagnosis is often indirect. More than half of those identified with social media addiction had originally entered treatment for prescription drug problems linked to severe insomnia. Clinicians discovered that the root cause of their sleeplessness was relentless late-night scrolling. This pattern underscores the hidden nature of the addiction; individuals frequently do not recognize their own compulsive behavior until it manifests through secondary, debilitating consequences like substance abuse or shattered sleep cycles.

The Mechanics of Addiction: Dopamine and the Reward Loop

Therapeutic insights reveal that platforms like TikTok and Instagram are engineered to fuel a potent cycle of dependency, driven by the brain’s chemistry. These apps exploit dopamine, the neurotransmitter associated with reward and pleasure. Users become hooked on the transient buzz provided by likes, shares, and comments. However, like any addictive substance, the effect diminishes over time, requiring more frequent and intense engagement to achieve the same satisfaction. This creates a reward loop that traps users in compulsive use, constantly chasing the next digital hit. For many patients, particularly young men and women, this primary addiction triggers a secondary, time-consuming obsession with curating a perfect online image. They report spending hours on makeup, clothing, and hair care, feeling unable to post content until they meet an unrealistic standard of attractiveness, further embedding their lives within the digital sphere.

The Real-World Fallout: Lives Unraveling Off-Screen

The consequences of this addiction extend far beyond the screen, wreaking havoc on real-world lives. Experts warn it systematically damages sleep, erodes personal relationships, and deteriorates mental health. The clinic group reports being contacted by around ten worried parents every week, seeking help for children who cannot control their social media use. For adults, the fallout can be catastrophic: some patients have lost jobs or become profoundly socially isolated as their screen time spirals out of control. The “always-on” culture rewires behavior, creating a need for constant stimulation and an inability to psychologically switch off, leaving individuals anxious and disconnected from the physical world around them. This crisis echoes a landmark case in the United States, where a young woman was awarded significant damages after suing Meta and YouTube over a childhood social media addiction, highlighting the growing global recognition of its harmful potential.

A Clinical Perspective: From Heavy Use to True Dependency

Zaheen Ahmed, Head of Treatment at The UKAT Group, articulates the clinical gravity of the situation: “This is no longer just heavy use—it’s dependency.” He draws a direct parallel between the mechanisms of social media and traditional addictions, noting, “The 24/7 access and endless reward loops of social media mimic the patterns we see in both behavioural and substance addictions.” What alarms clinicians most is the stealth of this condition. It often goes unnoticed, masquerading as generalized anxiety, insomnia, or even being dismissed as a “work necessity,” rather than being identified as the foundational cause of a person’s distress. This misdiagnosis delays crucial intervention, allowing the addiction to deepen its roots.

The Policy Response and the Path Forward

In response to this mounting crisis, the British government is currently consulting on a potential social media ban for under-16s. Campaigners have pointed to Australia-style prohibitions as a model, though questions remain about the practical enforcement and effectiveness of such bans. While legislative action is a significant step, the revelations from frontline clinics suggest that the problem is already deeply entrenched across age groups. Addressing it requires a multi-faceted approach: heightened public awareness to help individuals and families recognize the signs of dependency, ongoing research into the neurological impact of persistent digital engagement, and the development of specialized therapeutic interventions to treat this modern addiction. The challenge is to navigate a world where connectivity is essential, without letting the tools that provide it consume our health, our time, and our lives.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Telegram WhatsApp Email

Keep Reading

DVLA ‘£1,000 fine’ warning for drivers who don’t take action before deadline

United Kingdom May 19, 2026

Best motorway service stations in the UK named – full list

United Kingdom May 19, 2026

San Diego shooting updates: ‘Hate rhetoric’ of gunmen as three killed at mosque

United Kingdom May 19, 2026

Your legal rights when the neighbour uses your bins without asking

United Kingdom May 19, 2026

M60 Manchester closure LIVE: Traffic held after incident on major motorway ahead of rush hour

United Kingdom May 19, 2026

Car smashes into pensioner’s home as two injured and neighbours describe ‘chaos’

United Kingdom May 19, 2026

Double red lines introduced to clamp down on motorists ‘ruining’ Peak District beauty spots

United Kingdom May 19, 2026

Stafford Castle golf course stabbing: Police share CCTV footage in hunt for knifeman

United Kingdom May 19, 2026

Lee Andrews’ ‘frantic escape’ plan revealed after Katie Price’s husband is ‘kidnapped’ in Dubai

United Kingdom May 19, 2026

Editors Picks

Finnish divers recover bodies of two Italians from underwater cave in Maldives

May 19, 2026

Europol disrupts thousands of IRGC online accounts across 19 countries

May 19, 2026

Elon Musk’s loses OpenAI court case after jury finds he waited too long to sue

May 19, 2026

Congo Ebola outbreak: WHO ‘deeply concerned about the scale and speed of the epidemic’

May 19, 2026

Latest News

Best motorway service stations in the UK named – full list

May 19, 2026

As the EU moves to simplify cross-border rail travel, which countries’ passengers travel the most?

May 19, 2026

Video. Fast-moving wildfire spreads through Southern California hills

May 19, 2026

Subscribe to News

Get the latest Europe and World news and updates directly to your inbox.

Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest Instagram
2026 © Euro News Source. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Sign In or Register

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below.

Lost password?