In a recent conversation, someone told me that they have stopped checking their phones in the morning. Not because nothing was happening, but because everything was happening. They described the feeling as standing under a constant waterfall of bad news.
This experience is by no means isolated. According to the Reuters Institute’s 2025 Digital News Report, 69 per cent of Canadians now avoid the news at least occasionally.
Globally, 40% say they do the same thing at least sometimes or often, an all-time high. People shared consistent reasons for this. The news made you feel bad, overwhelmed, and powerless to take action.
As a developmental psychology researcher focused on social development and psychological well-being, I argue that news fatigue is not laziness, weakness, or a generational decline in civic engagement. This is a predictable reaction of the human brain when it encounters an environment it was never designed to navigate.
telegram announcing bad news
Long before there were smartphones or printing presses, our cognitive architecture has been shaped by a single problem. It’s about surviving long enough to reproduce. Our ancestors, whose attention was diverted past the rustle of the grass, left fewer descendants than those who froze, watched and listened.
Brains that paid attention to threats survived.
This is the basis of what psychologists call the negativity bias, and it is one of the most replicated findings in cognitive science. Through decades of research, it has been shown that the human mind weighs negative information more heavily than positive information, pays attention to it faster, and remembers it longer.
A nearby predator was more important than a beautiful sunset. The cost of missing the real threat was death, but the cost of overreacting was a few minutes of wasted vigilance. Asymmetry made this bias adaptive.
Here’s the problem. The human brain has not changed since then. We are the same species we were thousands of years ago. What has changed is the scale of the world we are asked to scan for threats.
scan the whole world
For most of human history, the threats handled by the nervous system were local. It’s a neighboring tribe. Drought. Children’s illnesses that we knew personally. Information about faraway places rarely reaches us, and even when it does, it is largely irrelevant.
In 2026, the same nervous system is asked to absorb war in one region, financial shock in another, climate disaster in a third, and violent crime in a fourth, all before lunchtime.
Research published in scientific journals nature human behavior We looked at over 105,000 real news headlines that have been viewed nearly 6 million times. Each negative word added increased click-through rate, while positive words had the opposite effect.
Recent research suggests that people around the world have measurably stronger physiological responses to negative news than to positive news. Before your mind can determine if a threat is relevant, your body is reacting.
Some researchers have introduced a clinical framework for what happens in this case, called problematic news consumption (PNC). This is a pattern in which attention to the news becomes concentrated, dysregulation occurs, and daily life is disrupted. Researchers found in a 2022 study that 17 percent of American adults identified themselves as having severe PNC. Of that group, 61% reported feeling a lot or very sick, compared to 6% who did not.
For minorities, news fatigue can have an even more significant impact.
Even if you are not the direct target, repeatedly witnessing harm directed at your group can have a significant psychological impact on those who belong to your group. For racialized communities, such as immigrants, the cognitive load can be even heavier, and the option to simply stop watching the news is much more difficult to exercise when the news is about their country of origin.
Looking away is not the solution
What is the solution to news fatigue? Well, it’s not avoidance. Democracy depends on an informed public.
Many adults already cite the spread of misleading information as a major cause of stress. Withdrawing from accurate and reliable information will only make the problem worse. We’re hardwired to pay more attention to bad news, and that kind of content is going to get to us one way or another.
The solution is to control consumption and sources.
There are several approaches to help manage news fatigue and protect your mental health. Keeping your news consumption within a set time frame reduces the feeling of being overwhelmed. It is also important to choose depth over volume. One long, carefully reported article is better informed than a ton of random, unreliable, emotional posts on Instagram.
There is also value in distinguishing between information and action. Research on perceived control and stress consistently shows that the gap between awareness and agency is one of the strongest predictors of psychological distress. identify what can be done actually Acting on what you read in the news, no matter how small, defines your reaction.
Finally, be wary of “anger bait,” or intentionally provocative messages or content aimed at eliciting negative reactions and increasing engagement on social media platforms. Recognizing that certain content creators want to provoke reality rather than reflect it creates useful cognitive distance.
The news will never stop being “heavy.” But our relationship with it can be more intentional. Our brains aren’t designed for inputs of this magnitude. But they are made to learn to adapt.![]()

