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UK social media ban could cut lifeline for disabled children, campaigners warn

UK social media ban could cut lifeline for disabled children, campaigners warn

Disability activists have said banning under-16s from social media risks cutting off a “lifeline for friendship” for disabled children. could push them into social isolation by preventing them from making connections online.

Charities. high-profile figures in disability advocacy said they were concerned that a blanket ban on social media would disproportionately affect teenagers who may not be able to meet people easily in real life or find peers with similar conditions.

Lucy Edwards, a blind broadcaster, author. disability activist, said she was pleased to see the government taking online safety seriously, but she believed a social media ban would have serious unintended consequences.

“I got 99.9% of my support via the internet as a young visually impaired girl,” she said. “I was 11. I didn’t know anyone in my real life who was blind, so naturally I took to social media. I would talk to friends on the other side of the planet – I can’t emphasise enough. no one I was friends with [in person] understood my vision loss like my friends online.”

She said the ban would prevent teenagers from discovering voices. influencers who had similar sight impairments or disabilities and who would become positive role models.

“If you block young visually impaired people from social media. you are restricting them from finding the independence they might not know they can have,” she said.

and Instagram, as well as blocking livestreaming functions.

He said the policy was not “cost-free”. that social media had brought benefits to young people, but a “total ban is the right choice”.

Dr Shani Dhanda, a broadcaster, author. accessibility consultant who has brittle bone disease, said social media platforms were a “lifeline for friendship, support and connection” for many young disabled people. “The focus should be on making platforms safer. not cutting young people off from communities they rely on to participate in society,” she said.

The Royal Society for Blind Children said it was actively working to counter the ban by expanding its own online clubs. groups. The charity said that while it supported better age-appropriate protections on social media. a ban risked “cutting off vital routes to connection for children who are already too often excluded”.

Lily Rose, the chief operating officer at the charity, said: “You might be the only young person in your school or for miles around who is experiencing vision impairment,. social media might be your only way of finding communities you can relate to. So we’re already looking at how we can bridge that gap when the ban comes into effect.”

Dr Amit Patel, a former trauma doctor turned disability rights campaigner who lost his sight in 2013, said he understood the need to keep children safe online. thought the ban risked “oversimplifying a complex issue”.

“Many disabled young people already face barriers to socialising and participating in their communities,” he said. “For them, social media is often far more than entertainment. It can be a lifeline that provides friendship, peer support, role models. a sense of belonging that may not always be available offline. Any policy in this area needs to consider the unintended consequences for groups who already experience exclusion and isolation.”

The Department for Science, Innovation and Technology has been contacted for comment.

Source: https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2026/jun/16/uk-social-media-ban-lifeline-disabled-children

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