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Teenagers who report addictive use of screens at greater risk of suicidal behaviour, study shows

about 16 hours ago
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Teenagers who show signs of being addicted to social media, mobile phones or video games are at greater risk of suicidal behaviour and emotional problems, according to research.A study, which tracked more than 4,000 adolescents for four years, found that nearly one in three reported increasingly addictive use of social media or mobile phones.Those whose use followed an increasingly addictive trajectory had roughly double the risk of suicidal behaviour at the end of the study.The findings do not prove screen use was the cause of mental health problems.But they highlight that compulsive use, which appears to be very common, as a significant risk factor that parents and healthcare services should be alert to.

Dr Yunyu Xiao, an assistant professor of population health sciences at Weill Cornell Medicine and first author of the study, said: “For parents and educators, the discussion around mobile phones and social media has focused on limiting or banning use, but our results indicate more complex factors are involved.“Testing interventions that work against other types of addiction may be one way to approach this type of social media and mobile phone use.”The findings come amid escalating mental health problems in young people and as governments are grappling with how to enforce safeguards around smartphones and social media.Against this backdrop, scientists have faced a near-impossible challenge to try to pin down evidence of how rapidly evolving and highly personalised screen use might be linked to young people’s mental health.The latest study tracked almost 4,300 adolescents aged nine to 10 when they started the study.

Rather than simply measuring screen time, the scientists assessed participants for “addictive use”, such as whether technology was interfering with activities like schoolwork and exercise and whether people experienced craving or feelings of distress when screens were withdrawn,Machine learning was used to cluster participants into groups based on their screen use trajectories,For mobile phones, about half of the children reported high addictive use from the start of the study that remained high through early adolescence, and a quarter developed increasing addictive use as they aged,For social media, 41% of children had high or increasing addictive use,For social media and mobile phones, the high and increasing addictive use trajectories were associated with a two to three times greater risk of suicidal behaviours and suicidal ideation compared with the low addictive use trajectory.

More than 40% of the youths had a high addictive use trajectory for video games.These adolescents were significantly more likely to report suicidal thoughts or behaviours, as well as symptoms of anxiety, depression, aggression or rule-breaking.By contrast, the total amount of time spent on social media, mobile phones and video games was not associated with future suicide-related or mental health outcomes.What mattered most was whether their use showed signs of compulsion, distress or loss of control.Xiao said: “There are many factors that would induce addictive feelings, such as the designs of the social media or video games, some kids may also experience bullying and more adverse childhood that they find using phones more comfortable, but later they cannot stop using it.

”The findings, published in the journal Jama, raise further questions over how parents should manage children’s screen use.“We do not know if just taking away access will help, unless it is taking away access 24/7, because we know from studies of addiction management that partial access can quickly reinforce the addiction,” Xiao said.Prof Amy Orben, who leads the Digital Mental Health Group at the University of Cambridge, said the study could not prove that technology use caused mental health problems.An alternative explanation would be that poor self-control could be the root cause for problematic screen use and mental health outcomes.“Yet the study importantly highlights that why and how young people use technologies, and how they feel technologies affect their lives, may matter more to their mental health than the time spent online,” she added.

“As those reporting such issues are not a small proportion of the population, supporting them should be taken seriously.”
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Federal Reserve holds interest rates, defying Trump’s demand to lower them

The US Federal Reserve kept interest rates on hold, but signaled it might make two cuts this year, as Donald Trump continues to break with precedent and demand lower rates.Policymakers at the American central bank lifted their projections for inflation this year, as the US president stands by his controversial tariff plans, and downgraded their estimates for economic growth.Uncertainty has faded, they said, but remains significant. The Fed chair, Jerome Powell, cautioned that officials expect tariffs imposed by Trump to increase prices over the course of the summer.“Increases in tariffs this year are likely to push up prices and weigh on economic activity,” Powell told reporters

about 11 hours ago
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John Lewis tells some head office staff to work in office at least three days a week

John Lewis is asking some head office staff to spend at least three days a week in the office or out on the road in the latest shift away from working from home.The department store group said members of its commercial teams – which include those working in buying and merchandising – should work no more than two days a week from home from July. Previously they were allowed to work up to three days a week at home.The change at the employee-owned group, which is renowned for its good treatment of workers, including access to holiday homes and a generous pension scheme, comes amid a broader shift among businesses ranging from the retailer Boots to Amazon and JP Morgan, which have told staff they must return five days a week.Last month, HSBC told staff in its UK high street banks that it may cut their bonuses if they did not work in the office at least 60% of the time

about 15 hours ago
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Israel-linked group hacks Iranian cryptocurrency exchange in $90m heist

An Israel-linked hacking group has claimed responsibility for a $90m (£67m) heist on an Iranian cryptocurrency exchange.The group known as Gonjeshke Darande, Farsi for Predatory Sparrow, said on Wednesday it had hacked the Nobitex exchange, a day after claiming it had destroyed data at Iran’s state-owned Bank Sepah.Elliptic, a consultancy specialising in crypto-related crime, said it had so far identified more than $90m in cryptocurrency sent from Nobitex crypto wallets to hacker addresses.The hackers appear to have in effect “burned” those funds, rendering them inaccessible by storing them in “vanity addresses” for which they do not have the cryptographic keys, Elliptic said.Tom Robinson, Elliptic’s co-founder, told the Guardian it would take current computer technology “billions of years” to create the cryptographic key pairs that match the vanity addresses

about 12 hours ago
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OpenAI boss accuses Meta of trying to poach staff with $100m sign-on bonuses

The boss of OpenAI has claimed that Mark Zuckerberg’s Meta has tried to poach his top artificial intelligence experts with “crazy” signing bonuses of $100m (£74m), as the scramble for talent in the booming sector intensifies.Sam Altman spoke about the offers in a podcast on Tuesday. They have not been confirmed by Meta. OpenAI, the company that developed ChatGPT, said it had nothing to add beyond its chief executive’s comments.“They started making these giant offers to a lot of people on our team – $100m signing bonuses, more than that comp [compensation] per year,” Altman told the Uncapped podcast, which is presented by his brother, Jack

about 18 hours ago
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Wallabies name squad for Fiji Test as James O’Connor misses out ahead of Lions series

Veteran fly half James O’Connor has been overlooked for the Wallabies’ first Test of the year against Fiji next month, all but ruling him of out of British & Irish Lions series.Coach Joe Schmidt has preferred Noah Lolesio, Ben Donaldson and Tom Lynagh to the 34-year-old O’Connor, who moved to the Crusaders this season and is set to play off the bench in the Super Rugby Pacific final against the the Chiefs on Saturday.The squad includes only two uncapped players – Western Force back rower Nick Champion de Crespigny and ACT Brumbies winger Corey Toole – and one overseas-based player, France-based former captain Will Skelton, although Lolesio, Langi Gleeson and Tom Hooper have been included despite signing deals that will take them overseas next year.Schmidt said there will be players who are disappointed. “As coaches there was a lot of healthy, robust discussion and we think we’ve selected a group that will work hard and connect well as a squad,” he said

about 4 hours ago
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Lakers to be sold to Dodgers owner at $10bn valuation, per reports

The Buss family is entering an agreement to sell a majority stake in the Los Angeles Lakers at a $10bn valuation, ESPN reported on Wednesday, marking the end of an era for one of the NBA’s most influential families.Mark Walter, the CEO and chair of holding company TWG Global, is set to take the majority ownership under the agreement, ESPN’s NBA insider Shams Charania said in a post on X. Walter was already a minority owner in the Lakers and is also primary owner and chair of the Los Angeles Dodgers of Major League Baseball, and the Los Angeles Sparks of the WNBA.The Lakers did not immediately respond to a request for comment.The late Jerry Buss bought the Lakers in 1979 and turned it into one of the most popular and valuable franchises in all of professional sports, winning five championships during their now-iconic “Showtime” era in the 1980s

about 9 hours ago
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Ombudsman rules for red-hot Gosden team as Royal Ascot roasts in the sun

about 13 hours ago
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Royal Ascot 2025 day two: Ombudsman rules in Prince of Wales’s Stakes – as it happened

about 13 hours ago
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Four leading British basketball clubs blocked from Europe as civil war deepens

about 15 hours ago
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Chaotic State of Origin Game 2 gives exhilarating glimpse into excess | Jack Snape

about 15 hours ago
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‘It’s going to be pretty monumental’: Harry Potter eyes Wallabies spot for Lions series | Jack Snape

about 16 hours ago
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England opt for Ollie Pope at No 3 over Jacob Bethell for first India Test

about 17 hours ago