City
Epaper

Instagram, Snapchat may be used to facilitate sexual assault in kids: Research

By IANS | Updated: September 27, 2024 18:20 IST

New York, Sep 27 Social media platforms like Instagram and Snapchat offer benefits for teens but also can ...

Open in App

New York, Sep 27 Social media platforms like Instagram and Snapchat offer benefits for teens but also can be used as a tool by predators online as about 7 per cent of more than 1,000 teens who disclosed sexual abuse reported that social media was used to facilitate the assault, a new study said on Friday.

The research, presented during the American Academy of Pediatrics 2024 National Conference & Exhibition, found that, when accounting only for victims whose perpetrators were not related to them, an even higher percentage – 12 per cent -- reported that social media facilitated sexual assault.

The team evaluated children 10 to 18 years of age who disclosed sexual abuse at Rady Children’s Hospital Chadwick Center for Children and Families between 2018 and 2023.

They defined “social media facilitated sexual assault” as occurring when social media is used for communication between a victim and perpetrator that leads to sexual assault.

Miguel Cano, a child abuse paediatrician and author of the research, said that adolescents are increasingly living their lives in digital spaces.

“Although there are benefits to the use of social media such as connecting with people and keeping in touch with family and friends across the globe, there are many well documented dangers as well,” Cano added.

According to the study, dangers include meeting strangers online or being subjected to various forms of maltreatment including emotional abuse, cyber bullying, harassment, threats, exposure to sexual content, and being victims of online sexual abuse.

Instagram and Snapchat were the two most commonly reported social media platforms used. However, multiple platforms were reported.

With few oversights and regulations, parents, paediatricians and anyone who cares for children need to understand this danger and need better tools and resources to help keep children safe from predators on social media, Cano stressed.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

EntertainmentArya Babbar looks back at his parents Raj Babbar and Nadiya’s love story on their 50th anniversary

InternationalWorld AMR Awareness Week 2025: WHO calls for urgent, unified action as AMR threat intensifies in South-East Asia

TechnologySeoul shares tumble amid AI bubble fears; won plunges to 7-month low

Other SportsAfter missing Kolkata game due to rib injury, Rabada ruled out of second Test

BusinessSeoul shares tumble amid AI bubble fears; won plunges to 7-month low

Health Realted Stories

HealthUS CDC does a U-turn on autism-vaccine link, doctors reject claims

HealthCDSCO labs flag 211 drug samples as ‘not of standard quality’ in October

HealthIndia, Germany advance collaboration on traditional medicine

HealthBlocking a single protein forces cancer cells to self-destruct: Study

HealthRajasthan: 7 firms and 40 medicines banned in 2025