Updated
Updated · The Guardian · May 22
UK Experts Urge 7.5-Hour Screentime Swaps to Curb Doomscrolling
Updated
Updated · The Guardian · May 22

UK Experts Urge 7.5-Hour Screentime Swaps to Curb Doomscrolling

2 articles · Updated · The Guardian · May 22
  • UK adults spend about 7.5 hours a day on screens, and experts say the key risk is not screens themselves but compulsive, passive use such as doomscrolling.
  • Researchers and psychologists recommend replacing low-intention scrolling with more active digital habits—gaming, word puzzles, messaging, creating and structured learning—because control and purpose are linked to better wellbeing.
  • Nearly 40,000 players in an Oxford-led study showed gaming was not tied to poorer mental health by itself; outcomes worsened when people felt pushed by reward loops, notifications or fear of missing out.
  • Word games and educational apps can strengthen memory, attention and processing speed, while creative tools and online communities may reduce stress, support identity and ease isolation.
  • That distinction matters as almost half of British adults report loneliness, which is associated with a 27% higher mortality risk, making intentional digital use a broader public-health issue.
When does 'active' screen time become a new form of digital addiction?
Beyond individual choice, what societal shifts could curb our collective screen dependency?