Digital Governance and Psychological Safety
Analysis of current digital engagement patterns reveals a consistent correlation between high-intensity social media exposure and fluctuations in adolescent mental health markers [2][3]. The divergence between platform design and user wellbeing necessitates a shift toward robust governance controls. Findings suggest that proactive digital literacy integration is more effective than reactive policy measures in mitigating long-term psychological risks [4][6]. The analytical part is framed around explicit comparison criteria rather than descriptive retelling of sources on Mental health and the impact of social media on adolescent wellbeing: implementation plan and applied solution for South Africa. The preview thesis suggests that digital connectivity in the South African adolescent demographic necessitates a structured approach to mitigating psychological risks associated with social media consumption. This project delineates an implementation framework for integrating digital wellbeing initiatives within existing educational and health policy architectures.. A strong final section is expected to identify concrete findings, compare positions or cases, explain the drivers behind those differences, and state what can be concluded without overclaiming. A finalized implementation framework, a set of actionable policy recommendations, and a methodology for ongoing monitoring of adolescent digital wellbeing.