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Assess Your Facebook Addiction

Katarzyna Mazur

Katarzyna Mazur

2026-03-18
2 min. read
Assess Your Facebook Addiction
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After adding a new photo, do you routinely check the number of likes on the page? How often have you refreshed Facebook right after waking up or during a bathroom visit? If the answer to at least one of these questions is 'yes', you should consider whether you have become a victim of a silent but dangerous social media addiction. Do you prefer reading books or Facebook updates?

Social Media Overuse Risk Assessment Scale – a Diagnostic Tool for Facebook Dependency Tendencies

In the contemporary digital landscape, Facebook has attained a level of ubiquity comparable to that of television, with its user base expanding at a steady pace. All too often—and frequently without conscious awareness—individuals develop compulsive usage patterns that not only deplete valuable time but may also precipitate significant psychological consequences, including diminished self-worth, heightened sensations of social isolation, and, in severe instances, clinical depression. The demarcation between deliberate, controlled engagement and mindless, habitual scrolling is often tenuous, yet it can be systematically evaluated through empirically validated methodologies. Key diagnostic inquiries include: Do you utilize Facebook as a means of escaping personal challenges or distressing emotions? Do you experience heightened anxiety, irritability, or unease when access to the platform is restricted or unavailable? To quantify the severity of these behavioral tendencies, responses are assigned numerical values corresponding to the frequency of occurrence on a five-point Likert scale: 1 – almost never, 2 – seldom, 3 – occasionally, 4 – frequently, 5 – almost always. Obtaining scores of 4 or 5 on at least four items may indicate the presence of a behavioral addiction. Additional red flags encompass: an escalating compulsion to engage with the platform, repeated unsuccessful attempts to curtail usage duration, and measurable declines in occupational or academic performance attributable to distraction. Research conducted by Dr. Cecilie Schou Andreassen of the University of Bergen—based on a sample of 423 university students—facilitated the development of a diagnostic questionnaire, including items such as: Do you devote substantial portions of your day to contemplating Facebook or strategizing your interactions on the platform?

Trapped in Facebook’s Web: How the Platform Consumes Our Reality

The phenomenon has reached alarming proportions. Individuals sharing the same physical space—even seated at the same table—opt for messenger-based exchanges over face-to-face conversation, compulsively engage with posts through likes, and annotate content with an endless stream of hashtags. The tangible presence of another person pales in comparison to the vivid, hyperstimulating allure of the digital realm. Users fear that disconnecting from Facebook will cause them to miss out on meaningful updates, yet in truth, it is their perpetual online immersion that robs them of what truly matters. Before reaching for your device to check another notification, pause to consider: Are you sacrificing irreplaceable moments for fleeting digital interactions? Step away from the screen—and step back into genuine living.
Katarzyna Mazur

Katarzyna Mazur

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