
How social media can 'trigger' eating disorders in youngsters
Social media can push vulnerable young people towards developing eating disorders by glorifying thinness and promoting fake, dangerous advice about diet and nutrition, experts warn.
Young women and girls are much more likely to suffer from illnesses such as anorexia, bulimia and binge eating disorder, though rates among men have been increasing.
Research has shown the percentage of people worldwide who have had some kind of eating disorder during their lives rose from 3.5 percent in 2000 to 7.8 percent in 2018, a timeframe that captures the rise of social media. For the professionals trying to help teenagers recover from these disorders, misinformation from influencers on platforms such as TikTok and Instagram is a huge problem.
"We no longer treat an eating disorder without also addressing social media use," French dietitian and nutritionist Carole Copti told AFP.
"It has become a trigger, definitely an accelerator and an obstacle to recovery," she added.
The causes of eating disorders are complex, with psychological, genetic, environmental and social factors all having the potential to make someone more susceptible. Social media "is not the cause but the straw that may break the camel's back," said Nathalie Godart, a psychiatrist for children and adolescents at the Student Health Foundation of France.
By promoting thinness, strictly controlled diets and relentless exercise, social media weakens already vulnerable people and "amplifies the threat" to their health, she told AFP.
'Vicious cycle'
Just one recent example is the #skinnytok trend, a hashtag on TikTok full of dangerous and guilt-inducing advice encouraging people to drastically reduce how much food they eat.
For Charlyne Buigues, a French nurse specialising in eating disorders, social media serves as a gateway to these problems, which are "normalised" online.
She condemned videos showing young girls with anorexia exposing their malnourished bodies -- or others with bulimia demonstrating their "purges".
"Taking laxatives or vomiting are presented as a perfectly legitimate way to lose weight, when actually they increase the risk of cardiac arrest," Buigues said.
Eating disorders can damage the heart, cause infertility and other health problems, and have been linked to suicidal behaviour.
Anorexia has the highest rate of death of any psychiatric disease, research has found. Eating disorders are also the second leading cause of premature death among 15- to 24-yearolds in France, according to the country's health insurance agency. Social media creates a "vicious cycle," Copti said.
"People suffering from eating disorders often have low self-esteem. But by exposing their thinness from having anorexia on social media, they gain followers, views, likes... and this will perpetuate their problems and prolong their denial," she added.
This can especially be the case when the content earns money. Buigues spoke of a young woman who regularly records herself throwing up live on TikTok and who had "explained that she was paid by the platform and uses that money to buy groceries".
'Completely indoctrinated'
Social media also makes recovering from eating disorders "more difficult, more complicated and take longer", Copti said.
This is partly because young people tend to believe the misleading or fake diet advice that proliferates online.
Copti said consultations with her patients can feel like she is facing a trial.
"I have to constantly justify myself and fight to make them understand that no, it is not possible to have a healthy diet eating only 1,000 calories -- that is half what they need -- or that no, it is not normal to skip meals," she said.
"The patients are completely indoctrinated -- and my 45-minute weekly consultation is no match for spending hours every day on TikTok," she added. Godart warned about the rise of people posing as "pseudo-coaches", sharing incorrect, "absurd" and potentially illegal nutrition advice.
"These influencers carry far more weight than institutions. We're constantly struggling to get simple messages across about nutrition," she said, pointing out that there are lifelines available for those in need.
Buigues takes it upon herself to regularly report problematic content on Instagram, but said it "serves no purpose".
"The content remains online and the accounts are rarely suspended -- it's very tiring," she said. The nurse has even advised her patients to delete their social media accounts, particularly TikTok.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Tribune
30-07-2025
- Daily Tribune
Liver cancer to double worldwide, most of it preventable: study
AFP | Paris The number of people with liver cancer will nearly double worldwide by 2050 unless more is done to address preventable causes such as obesity, alcohol consumption and hepatitis, a study warned Tuesday. New cases of liver cancer -- the sixth most common form of the disease -- will rise to 1.52 million a year from 870,000 if current trends continue, according to data from the Global Cancer Observatory published in the Lancet medical journal. It is also the third deadliest of all cancers, with the study predicting it would take 1.37 million lives by the middle of the century. However three out of five cases of liver cancer could be prevented, the international team of experts said. The risk factors are drinking alcohol, viral hepatitis and a build-up of fat in the liver linked to obesity called MASLD, which was previously known as non-alcoholic fatty liver disease. The viruses that cause hepatitis B and C are expected to remain the leading causes of liver cancer in 2050, according to the study, published on World Hepatitis Day. Vaccination at birth is the best way to prevent hepatitis B, but vaccine coverage remains low in poorer countries including in sub-Saharan Africa, the study said. Unless vaccination rates are increased, hepatitis B is expected to kill 17 million people between 2015 and 2030, it added. Alcohol consumption is estimated to cause more than 21 percent of all cases of liver cancer by 2050, up more than two percentage points from 2022.


Gulf Insider
30-07-2025
- Gulf Insider
Dopamine Is Not Why Kids Love TikTok
Nowadays, it seems we can be addicted to anything – not just alcohol and drugs, but pornography, random Internet browsing, video games, and smartphones. Academic research papers have investigated a wide range of other behaviors including gambling, but also 'dance addiction,' 'fishing addiction,' 'milk tea addiction,' and 'cat addiction.' One cheeky paper used the standard medical criteria to show young people are 'addicted' to their real-life friends. While this trend involves many factors, perhaps the single most important claim that has transformed what might be devoted or enthusiastic behavior into a presumed medical case of addiction is the presence of the neurotransmitter dopamine. Health experts and the popular press tell us that fun activities can give us 'dopamine hits' and that overindulging can result in 'dopamine blowout.' Indulging too much in naughty activities (somehow, it's always naughty activities) may create a 'dopamine deficit.' To cite a few of many examples: A Washington Post podcast declared that 'dopamine surges' explain why 'you can't stop scrolling, even though you know you should.' The Guardian reported that Silicon Valley is 'keen to exploit the brain chemical' to keep us hooked on tech. Earlier this month, CNN told readers, 'an addiction expert says it might be time for a 'dopamine fast.'' There's a problem with this scientific-sounding explanation for an alleged explosion in addictive behaviors: It is not supported by science. Solid research connecting dopamine spikes to drugs and alcohol – that is, the capacity of one chemical to ignite another – has not been shown to occur in similar ways with other behaviors. Drug use is fundamentally and physiologically different from behaviors that do not rely on pharmaceutical effects. This has been confirmed in humans: Technology, such as video games or social media, simply doesn't influence dopamine receptors the way illicit substances do. Experts say what we are seeing instead is pseudoscience that appears to legitimize a moral panic about behaviors that trouble certain segments of society. By falling for this pseudoscience, parents and others are at risk of missing more fundamental mental health issues that could be at the root of the obsessive behavior, potentially harming the very children they seek to help. 'Addiction is an important clinical term with a troubled and weighty history,' said Dean Burnett, a neuroscientist and coauthor of a brief explainer of what dopamine does and doesn't do. 'People enduring genuine addiction struggle to be taken seriously or viewed sympathetically at the best of times, so to apply their very serious condition to much more benign actions like scrolling TikTok makes this worse.' Burnett likens current narratives about dopamine and technology to 'science garnish,' effectively adding a dash of scientific language to nonsense beliefs. 'It's the informational equivalent of sprinkling parsley on a lasagna that's 90 percent horse offal,' he said. 'It may look nicer, but it isn't.' The pseudoscience, however, does play a useful role for parents and others who seek to restrict the behaviors they find disturbing. After all, 'Don't do X because it will dangerously rewire the reward circuits of your brain and cause addiction' is more compelling than 'Don't do X because I don't like it and think you are wasting your time.' Growing Mistrust of Experts At a time when science has been riven by a series of scandals involving unreliable and falsified research at universities, including Stanford and Harvard, the public is having a harder time distinguishing scientific truth from pseudoscience. As growing numbers of Americans question the veracity of many well-established findings, such as the safety of vaccines, the popularity of the dopamine myth amounts to another misreading of science to serve other purposes in a culture desperate for simplistic moral answers. Such answers can be found in bookshelves full of titles like 'Dopamine Detox' and 'Dopamine Reset.' These experts warn us that activities we think make us happy are actually making us unhappy in the long term because we're doing dopamine wrong. Advice sites are quite explicit about this: 'You can get dopamine either from rich sources like meditating, exercising, or doing something that is meaningful to you and that serves you in the long run. Or you can get dopamine from self-sabotaging activities like eating junk food, scrolling social media mindlessly, or anything that provides pleasure instantly or in the short term. The choice is yours.' At the extreme, people may go on 'dopamine detoxes,' avoiding fun activities for some length of time in hopes of resetting their dopamine. Click here to read more Also read: Social Media Especially Harms Girls' Sleep & Mental Health


Daily Tribune
17-07-2025
- Daily Tribune
Over 50 Dead in Devastating Mall Fire in Eastern Iraq's Kut City
More than 50 people lost their lives in a massive fire that engulfed a shopping mall in the eastern Iraqi city of Kut, medical sources confirmed on Thursday. 'We have more than 50 martyrs, and many bodies remain unidentified,' a medical source told AFP. The tragedy unfolded rapidly, leaving little time for evacuation as the blaze tore through the building. Officials from the health department in Wasit province reported at least 55 confirmed deaths so far. Rescue teams continue to search for those still missing beneath the debris, fearing the toll could rise further. The cause of the fire has yet to be officially determined, and local authorities have launched an investigation. The mall, a popular shopping and leisure destination, was reportedly busy at the time of the incident. Emergency services are working around the clock to aid victims, support grieving families, and identify the deceased. Hospitals in the region are on high alert and treating several individuals who suffered burns and smoke inhalation. This incident marks one of the deadliest fires in recent years in Iraq, raising serious concerns over safety measures and building regulations in public spaces.