For teens' mental health, strong friendships matter more than social media use, study finds

Teens who report strong, high-quality friendships tend to have better mental health—an influence that appears nearly three times stronger than the link between social media use and mental health challenges, according to a new study published in the Journal of Adolescent Health.

Andrew Tate DESTROYS DeSantis For STUPID Comments On Tate Brothers Coming to Florida
- A Studio Note Gave The X-Files' Two Fan-Favorite Characters - Chris Snellgrove
- OpenAI and Microsoft Face Legal Action Over Alleged Copyright Violations - Sean George
- Revitalizing Your Android Smartphone: A Comprehensive Guide - Michael A. Medeiros
- NEW PHOTOS: Panda-core at the Smithsonian National Zoo in DC
- Sony demos an AI-powered PlayStation character - Sarah Fielding
- North Korea unveils nuclear-powered submarine for the first time - MeighTimbol

Is Intel Back? ft. Lenovo's Yoga 2025 Edition
- Secretary of State Rubio Calls for 'Credible, Sectarian Governance' in Syria - How Likely Is That?
- Taco Bell drops 2025 menu lineup, including Baja MIDNIGHT, new item testing in Cincinnati
- RINOs Now Defending 'Green' Subsidies
- Deep Space Nine Season Finale Nearly Ruined The Show - Chris Snellgrove
- CRM provider Creatio launches first ‘AI native’ platform with agentic digital talent built-in - Carl Franzen
- RFK Jr. promptly cancels vaccine advisory meeting, pulls flu shot campaign - Beth Mole