Teen brain / David Gillespie.
Publication details: Sydney, New South Wales : Pan Macmillan Australia, 2019.Description: 326 pages : illustrations, charts ; 24 cmISBN:- 9781760559465
- 1760559466
- Teen brain : why screens are making your teenager depressed, anxious and prone to lifelong addictive illnesses - and how to stop it now
- Social media addiction
- Technology -- Psychological aspects
- Internet and families
- Computers and families
- Technology and children
- Video games and children
- Child rearing
- Attention in adolescence
- Teenagers
- Internet and teenagers
- Adolescence
- Cell phones and teenagers
- Internet addiction
- Adolescence
- Internet and children
- Video game addiction
- Parenting
- Adolescent psychology
- Stress in adolescence
- Internet and teenagers
- Teenagers
- Cell phones and teenagers
- Internet addiction in adolescence
- Adolescent psychology
- Internet and children
- Parenting
- Video game addiction
- Internet addiction -- Prevention
- Internet users -- Mental health
- Australian
- 616.8584 23
Item type | Home library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item reserves | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | Melbourne Athenaeum Library | Non-Fiction | 616.858 GIL | Available | 069314 |
"Why screens are making your teenager depressed, anxious and prone to lifelong addictive illnesses - and how to stop it now"--cover subtitle.
Includes bibliographical references (pages 286-312) and index.
With their labile and rapidly developing brains, adolescents are particularly susceptible to addiction, and addiction leads to anxiety and depression. What few parents will know is that what we think of as the most typical addictions and problematic teen behaviours - smoking, drinking, drug taking, sex leading to teenage pregnancy - are on the decline. The bad news is that a whole raft of addictions has taken their place. Whereas once the dopamine-hungry brain of a teenager got its fix from smoking a joint or sculling a Bundy and coke, it is now turning to electronic devices for the pleasure jolt that typically comes from online playing games and engaging with social media. What is doubly troubling is that, unlike drugs, alcohol and cigarettes, electronic devices are not illicit. Quite the contrary. They are liberally distributed by schools and parents, with few restrictions placed on their use. And, to add fuel to the fire, emerging research shows that if addictive pathways are activated during the teen years, they are there for life, and that what starts as a screen addiction can lead to major substance abuse later in life.