Health and Wellness

The two-week ‘detox’ that can reverse a DECADE of cognitive decline and treat depression better than pills

Two weeks is all it takes to reverse a decade’s worth of cognitive decline linked to social media addiction.

In one of the largest trials of its kind, more than 467 adults were asked to block out all internet access on their phones for just 14 days. That included no TikTok, no Instagram and no social media-related doomscrolling.

The calling and texting functions still worked, essentially turning their smart phones into analog phones of the past using an app called Freedom that blocked all internet access. 

The results shocked the researchers.

By the end of the two-week period, screen time had plummeted from over five hours a day to under three. Depression symptoms improved more than with antidepressants and matched the efficacy of cognitive behavioral therapy.

And in those who stuck with the 14-day social media fast, their sustained attention improved by the same magnitude as reversing 10 years of age-related decline, effectively erasing cognitive aging.

‘If we think about what we’re trying to detox from, it’s not the calling and the texting for the most part. It is the social media. It’s the gaming. It’s all of those short dopamine bursts that we get from all these things we do on our phones,’ said study co-author and Georgetown University psychology professor Dr Kostadin Kushlev.

For young people, the evidence is now overwhelming. Studies consistently link heavy social media use to higher rates of depression, anxiety, self-harm and poorer academic achievement. Brain imaging shows it can alter neural pathways involved in impulse control and reward processing.

Even the participants who cheated by sneaking back online after a few days still showed lasting benefits. And weeks after the experiment had ended, many participants said the benefits had stuck.

After two weeks, screen time fell from over five hours a day to under three. Depression symptoms improved more than with antidepressants, matching talk therapy. And sustained attention improved as much as reversing ten years of brain aging (stock)

The study’s findings, published in the journal PNAS Nexus, arrive at a pivotal moment for Silicon Valley. Last month, a California jury found Meta and YouTube negligent for designing products critics say are as deliberately addictive as tobacco or gambling.

The case was brought by a 20-year-old woman who testified she lost nearly every waking hour to social media. Her sleep was destroyed, her mind was consumed by anxiety, she had depression and a fixation on her appearance.

The jury awarded her $6 million in damages.

Georgetown researchers wanted to know if a digital detox could deliver real results. 

Of the 467 adults recruited — average age 32 — most already felt they used their phones too much. Eighty-three percent said they were highly motivated to cut back. 

Only iPhone users could take part. For two weeks, half used the Freedom app to block all internet on their phones; not just TikTok and Instagram, but YouTube, Safari, email, and news apps. 

‘What we were doing is turning their smartphones into what is now apparently a recognized term in the Merriam-Webster Dictionary, a dumb phone,’ Kushlev said.

‘A dumb phone that basically does what a phone does, calling and things we used to consider super advanced like texting, but does not allow you access to the internet.’

Left panel (Attention): The blue line climbs sharply during the detox, meaning sustained focus improved. The red line stays flat during the control period, then climbs just as sharply when they later unplug. Middle panel (Mental Health): Both groups showed significant mental health gains only during the two weeks they were offline. Right panel (Well-being): Life satisfaction and positive emotions rose consistently whenever participants were disconnected

Left panel (Attention): The blue line climbs sharply during the detox, meaning sustained focus improved. The red line stays flat during the control period, then climbs just as sharply when they later unplug. Middle panel (Mental Health): Both groups showed significant mental health gains only during the two weeks they were offline. Right panel (Well-being): Life satisfaction and positive emotions rose consistently whenever participants were disconnected

The other half kept using their phones as usual, then swapped: the control group blocked the internet for the next two weeks, while the first group returned to normal use. This allowed researchers to test whether the benefits lasted.

The Freedom app tracked compliance. Participants needed the block active for at least 10 of 14 days to be considered compliant.

Only 119 out of 467 people, about 25 percent, actually met that bar. Blocking the internet was difficult for most. Still, the researchers kept them in the analysis.

At three points — the start, immediately after the detox and two weeks later — everyone completed surveys and an attention test.

The surveys, based on American Psychiatric Association screening tools, measured depression, anxiety, anger and social anxiety. They also measured well-being, which included life satisfaction and positive versus negative emotions.

To measure attention, participants took an online test. Images flashed on screen — mostly cityscapes, occasionally mountains. Press for a city. Do nothing for a mountain.

The images faded in slowly, forcing steady focus for minutes at a time. The test produced a scientifically validated score of sustained attention.

Four times a week, participants were asked in a text: ‘How do you feel right now, from 1 (bad) to 10 (good)?’

For young people, the evidence is clear: heavy social media use drives depression, anxiety, self-harm and poor grades. Brain scans prove it rewires impulse control (stock)

For young people, the evidence is clear: heavy social media use drives depression, anxiety, self-harm and poor grades. Brain scans prove it rewires impulse control (stock)

They answered immediately, capturing daily mood rather than how they remembered feeling weeks later.

Researchers also asked about time use: whether the detox just removed time on the phone or was replaced with healthier habits such as exercising or seeing friends in person.

Not only did screen time plummet, but sustained attention improved dramatically, making people’s focus as sharp as someone 10 years younger.

Their mental health improved as well, with the majority reporting increased life satisfaction and more positive emotions.

Across both groups, 91 percent of participants improved on at least one of the three key outcomes: mental health, well-being or sustained attention.

People who cheated also saw some of those benefits, albeit to a smaller degree, proving that even short detox periods can have significant benefits.

Two weeks after the detox ended, mental health and well-being remained better than before. Screen time did not fully rebound. The habit had been broken.

Participants had replaced phone time with healthier habits: more in-person socializing, exercise, time in nature and reading. Less news, less TV, fewer videos.

Kushlev said: ‘Even though it seems insurmountable, just a little bit of digital detox — a little bit of reduction of the constant stimulation from our phones, social media, games and so forth — could actually help us reclaim our ingrained ability to sustain attention.’

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