CLINICAL
This category presents the clinical evidence on the measurable impact of social media on children and adolescents. It covers mental health outcomes (depression, anxiety, problematic use), gender disparities in vulnerability, and the scale of online harms including child sexual abuse material (CSAM) and exploitation.
Data from the World Health Organization, INHOPE, WeProtect Global Alliance and the EU Joint Research Centre documents a consistent pattern: approximately 1 in 10 adolescents exhibits clinically problematic social media behaviour, with girls disproportionately affected. The category also tracks the alarming escalation of CSAM — a 202% increase in confirmed illegal records in 2024 — and the emergence of new threat vectors including AI-generated abuse material and financial sexual extortion (+7200%).
The evidence establishes that 93.24% of victims in reported cases are pre-pubescent children (ages 3–13), and that 70–85% of abuse involves known perpetrators using digital platforms to maintain contact.
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Age Demographics of Victims (2023-2024)
Gender Disparity in Social Media Use and Mental Health
Global Scaling of Child Sexual Abuse Material (CSAM)
Longitudinal Trend of CSAM Identification (2020-2024)
Prevalence and Perpetrator Relationship in European CSA Cases
Problematic Social Media Use and Online Engagement
The Explosion of New and Intensified Digital Threats
Victim Demographics by Biological Sex