Teen Phone Addiction Statistics 2025: What the Numbers Reveal About Our Digital Habits
FACT CHECKED
The Nexus Teen Academy editorial and clinical team is dedicated to providing informative and accurate content to help families who are struggling with adolescent behavioral health problems. The editorial team works directly with the clinical team to ensure information is accurate and up-to-date.
To do this, our team uses the following editorial guidelines:
We generally only cite government and peer-reviewed studies
Scientific claims and data are backed by qualified sources
Content is updated to ensure we are citing the most up-to-date data and information
Clinically reviewed by Executive Director Hannah Carr, LPC
Executive Director Hannah Carr, LPC
Hannah graduated from Arizona State University with her Bachelor’s in Psychology and Master’s in Counseling and is a Licensed Professional Counselor in Arizona. She began her work as a therapist 12 years ago in South Phoenix with an intensive outpatient program for teens and their families. She joined Nexus in the residential program as the clinical director, eventually being promoted to the executive director, creating and building the clinical program structure and a strong culture focused on redirecting the trajectory of young lives.
The Nexus Teen Academy Editorial Staff is composed of writers, editors, and clinical reviewers with many years of experience writing about mental health and behavioral health treatment. Our team utilizes peer-reviewed, clinical studies from sources like SAMHSA to ensure we provide the most accurate and current information.
In 2025, the average person spends over 4.6 hours daily on their phone. That is nearly 1,700 hours a year, or almost three full months lost to scrolling, tapping, and checking notifications. These are not just harmless habits. They are signs of digital dependency affecting sleep, focus, emotions, and relationships.
So, what do the numbers really say about teen phone addiction? Phone addiction is not only real. It is growing, measurable, and impacting mental health worldwide, especially among teenagers. The compulsive need to stay connected interferes with academic success, self-esteem, and overall well-being.
If you are a parent watching your teen spiral into screen overuse, it is not just a phase. It is a behavioral pattern that needs serious attention. The expert clinical team at Nexus Teen Academy helps families break through digital overwhelm with personalized treatment for screen addiction, anxiety, and emotional recovery.
Key Takeaways
In 2025, the global average daily screen time reached 4 hours and 45 minutes, with countries like the Philippines and Brazil averaging well over 5 hours per day.
Teens aged 13 to 17 are among the most active phone users, spending over 7 hours per day on average, mainly on social media apps like TikTok, Instagram, and Snapchat.
The average person unlocks their phone 96 times per day, driven by habit loops, dopamine responses, and infinite scroll design.
Phone overuse is linked to increased anxiety, attention issues, sleep disruption, and rising rates of teen depression.
Apps like TikTok and Instagram are engineered to exploit attention with variable reward systems and nonstop content feeds, reinforcing compulsive behavior.
1 in 5 teens in the U.S. reports engaging in some form of nonsuicidal self-injury (NSSI).
Only one-third of teens who self-harm receive structured or inpatient treatment.
Teen Phone Addiction Is Blowing Up in 2025 and the Numbers Prove It
We are not just spending time on our phones. We are sinking hours, attention, and emotional bandwidth into endless scrolls. These stats reveal just how deep the world has fallen into screen obsession and who is getting hit the hardest.
Phone Screen Time Is Smashing Records Across the Globe
Global smartphone use hit an average of 4.6 hours per person daily in 2025. Statista says that’s a 20 percent jump since 2022 and still climbing. It’s even higher in some countries, passing the five-hour mark without slowing down.
This is not casual browsing anymore. It’s full-blown behavioral conditioning. Phones are now competing with sleep, family, meals, and real-world attention responsibilities, often winning.
Phone Check-In Syndrome Is Real, and You Probably Have It
Most people now unlock their phones around 96 times daily or once every 10 to 12 minutes. This stat, reported by RescueTime, is not about productivity. It reflects a compulsive loop of checking, swiping, and bouncing between apps without conscious purpose.
These frequent micro-interruptions fracture focus and create a rewired brain loop that thrives on digital hits. If your hand reaches for your phone without thinking, you are already in the cycle.
Which Generation Is Glued to Their Phones the Most in 2025? Let the Data Talk
In 2025, every age group is showing signs of screen addiction but the intensity, triggers, and consequences look very different. Here’s the breakdown you need to see.
Kids Are Getting Hooked to Social Media Before They Even Hit Middle School
Children aged 6 to 12 now average more than 3.5 hours of daily screen time, mostly on tablets, mobile games, and YouTube. According to Common Sense Media, many kids are introduced to phones by age 4. That early exposure is reshaping brain development and emotional regulation in ways even researchers are still uncovering.
As screen time replaces free play and face-to-face interaction, children are showing increased difficulty with focus, mood control, and social adaptability. What may look like harmless cartoons actually form the foundation for long-term behavioral patterns.
Teens Are the Most Addicted Age Group, and the Scroll Never Stops
Teens aged 13 to 17 are spending over 7 hours every day on their phones outside of schoolwork. TikTok, Snapchat, and Instagram are their top platforms, where the constant need for updates and likes is driving real psychological strain. According to a Pew Research study, most teens feel overwhelmed by social media pressure yet cannot stop scrolling.
Late-night phone use is one of the biggest red flags. Teens who use phones in bed are twice as likely to experience poor sleep, teen anxiety, and emotional dysregulation. This sleep deprivation cycle directly impacts academic performance and self-worth.
Top 5 Most Addictive Social Media Apps in 2025
Social media apps in 2025 are the main drivers of digital addiction. These five platforms lead the pack for daily usage, user loyalty, and screen time influence, especially among teens and young adults.
Insights below are based on usage and engagement metrics from the latest Data.ai report.
TikTok TikTok is the top app for phone addiction in 2025. Users spend an average of 89 minutes per day on the platform. Its short video format, endless scroll, and powerful algorithm make it nearly impossible to use for just a few minutes. With over 1.7 billion global users, it is especially dominant among teens.
YouTube YouTube holds attention through autoplay and algorithm-driven recommendations. The average user spends more than 72 minutes daily watching content, often without realizing it. YouTube remains one of the most time-consuming apps for all age groups, from children to adults.
Instagram Instagram combines photo sharing, reels, stories, and direct messaging into one addictive loop. In 2025, users spend over 51 minutes daily on the platform. Its engagement-driven design encourages frequent check-ins and comparison-based scrolling.
Facebook Facebook still commands a large adult user base. Users engage with the platform for around 48 minutes per day, interacting through groups, news feeds, memories, and messaging. Despite its age, Facebook remains one of the most habit-forming apps for older audiences.
Snapchat Thanks to its disappearing messages and daily streaks, Snapchat is most popular with teens. Average usage clocks in at 42 minutes per day, but many users open the app 50 times or more daily. Its fast-paced, high-frequency style keeps teens engaged around the clock.
What Phone Addiction Is Doing to Your Brain and Body in 2025
The numbers do not just show screen time going up. They reveal a growing mental and physical cost. What feels like harmless phone use is leading to emotional instability, sleep disorders, and chronic fatigue, especially in teens.
Phone Addiction Is Quietly Fueling Anxiety, Mood Swings, and Emotional Burnout
Heavy phone use is not just a habit. It is a trigger for rising anxiety, poor focus, and mental exhaustion. The American Psychological Association reports that teens who spend more than five hours a day on screens are twice as likely to show symptoms of depression and 40 percent more likely to struggle with anxiety.
Frequent scrolling shortens attention spans and fragments concentration. The constant pressure to stay connected or respond instantly builds emotional stress, especially for adolescents who are still developing emotional regulation skills.
Late Night Phone Use Is Destroying Sleep and Ruining Mornings
Using a phone within one hour of bedtime disrupts the body’s ability to release melatonin, the hormone responsible for sleep. According to Harvard Health Publishing, blue light exposure before bed can reduce deep sleep by more than 50 percent.
Teens who scroll late into the night wake up more tired, more irritable, and less focused. Over time, this sleep deprivation affects memory, decision-making, and overall mental health.
Prolonged Screen Time Is Now Showing Up in Physical Pain and Fatigue
Phone addiction is not only psychological. It is also physical. Users who spend more than three hours a day on screens are increasingly reporting symptoms like neck stiffness, dry eyes, headaches, and blurred vision.
The problem is posture. Holding a phone at chest level or lower pulls the head forward, placing pressure on the spine and shoulder muscles. What starts as mild discomfort can develop into chronic tension and digital fatigue, affecting daily productivity and focus.
Is Phone Addiction Real or Just a Trend? Science Confirms It’s the Real Thing
The idea that phone use can be addictive is not speculation. It is backed by clinical data. What many people think of as overuse is actually part of a broader category of behavioral addiction, and it is reshaping mental health treatment, especially for teens.
This form of addiction does not need a chemical substance. Repetition, reward, and craving are enough to create real changes in the brain. And phones have become the perfect delivery system for all three.
How Phone Addiction Mirrors Gambling and Other Behavioral Disorders
According to the American Psychiatric Association, smartphone addiction shows the same neurological patterns seen in gambling and impulse control disorders. The DSM-V now includes symptoms that match how people interact with their phones daily:
Checking compulsively without purpose.
Feeling anxious or irritable when separated from a device.
Failing to reduce screen time even after multiple attempts.
Using the phone to escape stress, boredom, or emotional discomfort.
For teens, the risk is even higher. Their self-worth often becomes tied to digital feedback, likes, comments, and notifications. This makes them more vulnerable to emotional instability and social anxiety triggered by digital withdrawal.
Clear Signs Your Phone Use Is Becoming an Addiction
Many people live with phone addiction without recognizing it. These are the most common behavioral red flags:
Checking your phone more than 100 times per day.
Feeling restless or anxious when your phone is out of reach.
Scrolling for long periods without realizing how much time has passed.
Ignoring family, friends, or responsibilities to stay online.
Feeling a constant need to respond, refresh, or stay updated.
These signs often appear slowly but escalate over time. It is time to act if you recognize multiple patterns in your own life or your teen’s.
How to Break Free From Phone Addiction Without Ditching Your Device
You do not need to give up technology to gain control over it. You just need a system. This is not about willpower. It is about creating smarter habits that reduce screen stress and build digital freedom. These proven strategies will help you take back your time, one step at a time.
Use Screen Time Tracking Tools to Expose the Real Problem
The first step in breaking phone addiction is knowing where your time is actually going. Both iOS and Android phones come with built-in screen time features. These tools show your daily usage, top apps, number of pickups, and peak use time.
Check your weekly report. Identify the apps that drain the most time. Look for usage spikes during boredom or stress. These insights will help you set clear limits based on your behavior, not guesswork.
Action tip: Set app limits for the top three time-consuming apps and enable weekly reports to track your progress.
Try a 24-Hour Digital Detox to Reset Your Brain
One day without a phone can do more than a week of half-hearted screen limits. Choose one weekend day to disconnect completely. Power off your device or put it in another room. Then, replace screen time with activities that refresh and reconnect you to the real world.
You do not need to go off the grid. You just need to feel what it is like to be fully present again.
Ideas to replace phone time:
Read a physical book.
Take a long outdoor walk without headphones.
Cook something new from scratch.
Have an in-person conversation with no phones in sight.
You will be surprised how calm and clear your mind feels after just one day off the feed.
Build Daily Phone-Free Habits That Train Your Brain to Focus
Lasting change comes from small rituals you repeat every day. These low-effort habits reduce temptation and help you reclaim control of your attention.
Start with these daily shifts:
Keep your phone out of your bedroom to improve sleep and reduce late-night scrolling.
Turn off non-critical app notifications so your brain is not on high alert all day.
Use Focus Mode or Do Not Disturb during work blocks or school time to protect deep focus.
Make meals, morning routines,yoga and exercise, and conversations screen-free to improve connection.
Consistency is what rewires your habits. The more you reinforce calm moments without a screen, the easier it becomes to choose real presence over digital noise.
Conclusion
You have seen the numbers. You have read the symptoms. The data does not lie; phone addiction is no longer a tech issue. It is a personal one. When screen time takes over your focus, energy, and peace of mind, it becomes a problem that needs more than a quick fix.
If you are a parent watching your teen get lost in endless scrolling, night after night, this is not just a phase. This is a real pattern. But patterns can be changed.
At Nexus Teen Academy, we specialize in helping teens overcome screen dependence, anxiety, and emotional overwhelm. Our evidence-based programs focus on behavior change, emotional recovery, and rebuilding healthy online and offline routines.
Phone addiction does not have to define your teen’s story. With the proper support, they can learn how to create balance, build self-control, and reconnect with life beyond the screen.
Contact us today to have a consultation with a Nexus admissions specialist. Let us help your teen find freedom from digital overload and return to what matters.
Frequently Asked Questions(FAQS)
What is the average daily phone usage in 2025?
Most users average 4.6 hours daily, with teens logging between 7 and 9 hours.
How much screen time is too much?
More than 2 hours a day of non-essential use is considered excessive by WHO and APA standards.
What age group uses phones the most?
Young adults aged 18 to 24 top the chart, but teens are the most vulnerable to mental health risks.
Is phone addiction considered a real disorder?
Yes. It is recognized as a behavioral addiction similar to gambling and food addiction.
Can excessive phone use cause anxiety or depression?
Yes. Studies link high screen time to increased anxiety, depression, and emotional burnout, especially in teens.
How can I reduce my screen time?
Use screen tracking apps, schedule phone-free hours, disable notifications, and consider digital detoxes. For teens, therapy-based treatment may be essential.
Executive Director Hannah Carr, LPC and nexus_admin
Teen Phone Addiction Statistics 2025: What the Numbers Reveal About Our Digital Habits
FACT CHECKED
The Nexus Teen Academy editorial and clinical team is dedicated to providing informative and accurate content to help families who are struggling with adolescent behavioral health problems. The editorial team works directly with the clinical team to ensure information is accurate and up-to-date.
To do this, our team uses the following editorial guidelines:
Clinically reviewed by Executive Director Hannah Carr, LPC
Executive Director Hannah Carr, LPC
Hannah graduated from Arizona State University with her Bachelor’s in Psychology and Master’s in Counseling and is a Licensed Professional Counselor in Arizona. She began her work as a therapist 12 years ago in South Phoenix with an intensive outpatient program for teens and their families. She joined Nexus in the residential program as the clinical director, eventually being promoted to the executive director, creating and building the clinical program structure and a strong culture focused on redirecting the trajectory of young lives.
Published By Nexus Teen Academy
Nexus Teen Academy
The Nexus Teen Academy Editorial Staff is composed of writers, editors, and clinical reviewers with many years of experience writing about mental health and behavioral health treatment. Our team utilizes peer-reviewed, clinical studies from sources like SAMHSA to ensure we provide the most accurate and current information.
Published On August 29, 2025
Table of Contents
In 2025, the average person spends over 4.6 hours daily on their phone. That is nearly 1,700 hours a year, or almost three full months lost to scrolling, tapping, and checking notifications. These are not just harmless habits. They are signs of digital dependency affecting sleep, focus, emotions, and relationships.
So, what do the numbers really say about teen phone addiction? Phone addiction is not only real. It is growing, measurable, and impacting mental health worldwide, especially among teenagers. The compulsive need to stay connected interferes with academic success, self-esteem, and overall well-being.
If you are a parent watching your teen spiral into screen overuse, it is not just a phase. It is a behavioral pattern that needs serious attention. The expert clinical team at Nexus Teen Academy helps families break through digital overwhelm with personalized treatment for screen addiction, anxiety, and emotional recovery.
Key Takeaways
Teen Phone Addiction Is Blowing Up in 2025 and the Numbers Prove It
We are not just spending time on our phones. We are sinking hours, attention, and emotional bandwidth into endless scrolls. These stats reveal just how deep the world has fallen into screen obsession and who is getting hit the hardest.
Phone Screen Time Is Smashing Records Across the Globe
Global smartphone use hit an average of 4.6 hours per person daily in 2025. Statista says that’s a 20 percent jump since 2022 and still climbing. It’s even higher in some countries, passing the five-hour mark without slowing down.
This is not casual browsing anymore. It’s full-blown behavioral conditioning. Phones are now competing with sleep, family, meals, and real-world attention responsibilities, often winning.
Phone Check-In Syndrome Is Real, and You Probably Have It
Most people now unlock their phones around 96 times daily or once every 10 to 12 minutes. This stat, reported by RescueTime, is not about productivity. It reflects a compulsive loop of checking, swiping, and bouncing between apps without conscious purpose.
These frequent micro-interruptions fracture focus and create a rewired brain loop that thrives on digital hits. If your hand reaches for your phone without thinking, you are already in the cycle.
Which Generation Is Glued to Their Phones the Most in 2025? Let the Data Talk
In 2025, every age group is showing signs of screen addiction but the intensity, triggers, and consequences look very different. Here’s the breakdown you need to see.
Kids Are Getting Hooked to Social Media Before They Even Hit Middle School
Children aged 6 to 12 now average more than 3.5 hours of daily screen time, mostly on tablets, mobile games, and YouTube. According to Common Sense Media, many kids are introduced to phones by age 4. That early exposure is reshaping brain development and emotional regulation in ways even researchers are still uncovering.
As screen time replaces free play and face-to-face interaction, children are showing increased difficulty with focus, mood control, and social adaptability. What may look like harmless cartoons actually form the foundation for long-term behavioral patterns.
Teens Are the Most Addicted Age Group, and the Scroll Never Stops
Teens aged 13 to 17 are spending over 7 hours every day on their phones outside of schoolwork. TikTok, Snapchat, and Instagram are their top platforms, where the constant need for updates and likes is driving real psychological strain. According to a Pew Research study, most teens feel overwhelmed by social media pressure yet cannot stop scrolling.
Late-night phone use is one of the biggest red flags. Teens who use phones in bed are twice as likely to experience poor sleep, teen anxiety, and emotional dysregulation. This sleep deprivation cycle directly impacts academic performance and self-worth.
Top 5 Most Addictive Social Media Apps in 2025
Social media apps in 2025 are the main drivers of digital addiction. These five platforms lead the pack for daily usage, user loyalty, and screen time influence, especially among teens and young adults.
Insights below are based on usage and engagement metrics from the latest Data.ai report.
TikTok is the top app for phone addiction in 2025. Users spend an average of 89 minutes per day on the platform. Its short video format, endless scroll, and powerful algorithm make it nearly impossible to use for just a few minutes. With over 1.7 billion global users, it is especially dominant among teens.
YouTube holds attention through autoplay and algorithm-driven recommendations. The average user spends more than 72 minutes daily watching content, often without realizing it. YouTube remains one of the most time-consuming apps for all age groups, from children to adults.
Instagram combines photo sharing, reels, stories, and direct messaging into one addictive loop. In 2025, users spend over 51 minutes daily on the platform. Its engagement-driven design encourages frequent check-ins and comparison-based scrolling.
Facebook still commands a large adult user base. Users engage with the platform for around 48 minutes per day, interacting through groups, news feeds, memories, and messaging. Despite its age, Facebook remains one of the most habit-forming apps for older audiences.
Thanks to its disappearing messages and daily streaks, Snapchat is most popular with teens. Average usage clocks in at 42 minutes per day, but many users open the app 50 times or more daily. Its fast-paced, high-frequency style keeps teens engaged around the clock.
What Phone Addiction Is Doing to Your Brain and Body in 2025
The numbers do not just show screen time going up. They reveal a growing mental and physical cost. What feels like harmless phone use is leading to emotional instability, sleep disorders, and chronic fatigue, especially in teens.
Phone Addiction Is Quietly Fueling Anxiety, Mood Swings, and Emotional Burnout
Heavy phone use is not just a habit. It is a trigger for rising anxiety, poor focus, and mental exhaustion. The American Psychological Association reports that teens who spend more than five hours a day on screens are twice as likely to show symptoms of depression and 40 percent more likely to struggle with anxiety.
Frequent scrolling shortens attention spans and fragments concentration. The constant pressure to stay connected or respond instantly builds emotional stress, especially for adolescents who are still developing emotional regulation skills.
Late Night Phone Use Is Destroying Sleep and Ruining Mornings
Using a phone within one hour of bedtime disrupts the body’s ability to release melatonin, the hormone responsible for sleep. According to Harvard Health Publishing, blue light exposure before bed can reduce deep sleep by more than 50 percent.
Teens who scroll late into the night wake up more tired, more irritable, and less focused. Over time, this sleep deprivation affects memory, decision-making, and overall mental health.
Prolonged Screen Time Is Now Showing Up in Physical Pain and Fatigue
Phone addiction is not only psychological. It is also physical. Users who spend more than three hours a day on screens are increasingly reporting symptoms like neck stiffness, dry eyes, headaches, and blurred vision.
The problem is posture. Holding a phone at chest level or lower pulls the head forward, placing pressure on the spine and shoulder muscles. What starts as mild discomfort can develop into chronic tension and digital fatigue, affecting daily productivity and focus.
Is Phone Addiction Real or Just a Trend? Science Confirms It’s the Real Thing
The idea that phone use can be addictive is not speculation. It is backed by clinical data. What many people think of as overuse is actually part of a broader category of behavioral addiction, and it is reshaping mental health treatment, especially for teens.
This form of addiction does not need a chemical substance. Repetition, reward, and craving are enough to create real changes in the brain. And phones have become the perfect delivery system for all three.
How Phone Addiction Mirrors Gambling and Other Behavioral Disorders
According to the American Psychiatric Association, smartphone addiction shows the same neurological patterns seen in gambling and impulse control disorders. The DSM-V now includes symptoms that match how people interact with their phones daily:
For teens, the risk is even higher. Their self-worth often becomes tied to digital feedback, likes, comments, and notifications. This makes them more vulnerable to emotional instability and social anxiety triggered by digital withdrawal.
Clear Signs Your Phone Use Is Becoming an Addiction
Many people live with phone addiction without recognizing it. These are the most common behavioral red flags:
These signs often appear slowly but escalate over time. It is time to act if you recognize multiple patterns in your own life or your teen’s.
At Nexus Teen Academy, we offer Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT), Mental Health Treatment, Family Therapy, Academic Support, Life Skills Training, and Mindfulness Activities to help teens overcome phone addiction, restore emotional health, rebuild structure, and reconnect with real life.
How to Break Free From Phone Addiction Without Ditching Your Device
You do not need to give up technology to gain control over it. You just need a system. This is not about willpower. It is about creating smarter habits that reduce screen stress and build digital freedom. These proven strategies will help you take back your time, one step at a time.
Use Screen Time Tracking Tools to Expose the Real Problem
The first step in breaking phone addiction is knowing where your time is actually going. Both iOS and Android phones come with built-in screen time features. These tools show your daily usage, top apps, number of pickups, and peak use time.
Check your weekly report. Identify the apps that drain the most time. Look for usage spikes during boredom or stress. These insights will help you set clear limits based on your behavior, not guesswork.
Action tip: Set app limits for the top three time-consuming apps and enable weekly reports to track your progress.
Try a 24-Hour Digital Detox to Reset Your Brain
One day without a phone can do more than a week of half-hearted screen limits. Choose one weekend day to disconnect completely. Power off your device or put it in another room. Then, replace screen time with activities that refresh and reconnect you to the real world.
You do not need to go off the grid. You just need to feel what it is like to be fully present again.
Ideas to replace phone time:
You will be surprised how calm and clear your mind feels after just one day off the feed.
Build Daily Phone-Free Habits That Train Your Brain to Focus
Lasting change comes from small rituals you repeat every day. These low-effort habits reduce temptation and help you reclaim control of your attention.
Start with these daily shifts:
Consistency is what rewires your habits. The more you reinforce calm moments without a screen, the easier it becomes to choose real presence over digital noise.
Conclusion
You have seen the numbers. You have read the symptoms. The data does not lie; phone addiction is no longer a tech issue. It is a personal one. When screen time takes over your focus, energy, and peace of mind, it becomes a problem that needs more than a quick fix.
If you are a parent watching your teen get lost in endless scrolling, night after night, this is not just a phase. This is a real pattern. But patterns can be changed.
At Nexus Teen Academy, we specialize in helping teens overcome screen dependence, anxiety, and emotional overwhelm. Our evidence-based programs focus on behavior change, emotional recovery, and rebuilding healthy online and offline routines.
Phone addiction does not have to define your teen’s story. With the proper support, they can learn how to create balance, build self-control, and reconnect with life beyond the screen.
Contact us today to have a consultation with a Nexus admissions specialist. Let us help your teen find freedom from digital overload and return to what matters.
Frequently Asked Questions(FAQS)
Most users average 4.6 hours daily, with teens logging between 7 and 9 hours.
More than 2 hours a day of non-essential use is considered excessive by WHO and APA standards.
Young adults aged 18 to 24 top the chart, but teens are the most vulnerable to mental health risks.
Yes. It is recognized as a behavioral addiction similar to gambling and food addiction.
Yes. Studies link high screen time to increased anxiety, depression, and emotional burnout, especially in teens.
Use screen tracking apps, schedule phone-free hours, disable notifications, and consider digital detoxes. For teens, therapy-based treatment may be essential.