According to the results of a 2015 study, titled "Quitting Facebook Leads to Higher Levels of Well-Being," browsing Facebook can make you more stressed.
The study, which was published in the journal Cyberpsychology, Behavior, and Social Networking, was conducted by researchers from the University of Copenhagen.
For the study, Danish researcher Morten Tromholt recruited 1,095 volunteers who were separated into two groups: one who promised not to use Facebook for a week and a control group that used it as usual.
The experiment, which lasted for one week, set out to determine if regular Facebook use negatively affected a person's well-being. The researchers compared data from the treatment group who took a break from Facebook with data from the control group.
The findings showed that only 87 percent of the group who had to quit the social network made it the full week. The volunteers who kept their word and didn't use Facebook for the whole week reported a higher level of happiness than the control group.
After the one-week experiment, 88 percent of the treatment group shared that quitting Facebook made them happier, compared to 81 percent from the control group. (Related: Try a temporary social media detox! Quitting Facebook reduces stress.)
The researchers were also worried about the rest of the findings, which showed that:
On the other hand, the results of the study also showed that:
The researchers concluded that going on a Facebook detox had a two-fold beneficial effect on a person's mental health: It can help increase your life satisfaction, and make your emotions "more positive."
The team of scientists added that the effects of a Facebook detox were more noticeable "for heavy Facebook users, passive Facebook users, and users who tend to envy others on Facebook."
If you want to try going on a Facebook detox to improve your mental health, follow the suggestions below.
Visit Mind.news to read more articles about the benefits of a social media detox.
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