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Social Media Addiction Lawsuits Protecting Missouri Youth

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    If social media platforms have harmed your child’s mental health, you deserve to know that legal options exist—and that speaking with an experienced attorney costs you nothing, with no upfront fees and no obligation to proceed unless we secure compensation for your family. Call (314) 408-6136 for a free consultation to discuss your situation with attorneys who understand these complex cases and have recovered over $5 billion in negotiated settlements across mass tort litigation.
    At OnderLaw, we recognize that these cases represent more than legal claims. They embody parents’ fight to protect their children from platforms that allegedly prioritized profits over youth safety, deliberately engineering addictive features despite internal research showing severe mental health consequences for vulnerable adolescents. Our mass tort team brings decades of experience holding corporations accountable when their products cause widespread harm, and we’re now applying that expertise to help Missouri families from St. Louis to Kansas City seek justice against companies whose platforms may have contributed to the youth mental health crisis affecting communities nationwide.

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    Understanding Social Media Addiction
    Lawsuits in Missouri

    Social media addiction lawsuits apply product liability principles to digital platforms, arguing that addictive algorithms and design features constitute dangerous products that cause psychological harm to young users.

    Product Liability Theory

    These lawsuits represent a developing area of product liability law, one that challenges traditional notions of what constitutes a dangerous product. Plaintiffs assert that platforms like Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, and Snapchat deliberately designed their products to be addictive, particularly targeting young users whose developing brains are especially vulnerable to manipulation through algorithmic features and psychological triggers. Unlike traditional product liability cases involving physical defects—a faulty brake system or contaminated medication—these claims argue that the platforms’ software design itself constitutes a dangerous product that causes psychological and emotional injuries when used exactly as intended. While Missouri courts have not yet definitively ruled whether digital platforms qualify as “products” under state law (RSMo §537.760), plaintiffs nationwide are advancing arguments that may reshape how we think about corporate responsibility when companies design technologies specifically to exploit human psychology.

    MDL Consolidation

    The legal landscape shifted dramatically when federal courts consolidated hundreds of individual lawsuits into Multidistrict Litigation (MDL) No. 3047 in the Northern District of California, where Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers oversees coordinated pretrial proceedings. This consolidation allows families to benefit from shared discovery that might reveal internal company documents, coordinated legal strategies developed by experienced mass tort attorneys, and the collective strength of cases from across the country while maintaining their individual claims for damages specific to their child’s injuries.

    Statute of Limitations

    Missouri families considering legal action should understand that the state’s five-year statute of limitations for personal injury claims (RSMo §516.120) applies, though minors receive special protection under Missouri law (RSMo §516.170) that tolls—or pauses—the deadline until they reach age eighteen, potentially extending the window for filing claims well into a child’s adulthood if the harm began during their teenage years. Therefore, parents need not rush to file before fully understanding their child’s long-term prognosis and treatment needs.

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    Which Social Media Platforms
    Face Addiction Lawsuits?

    The scope of litigation extends across the social media landscape, though certain platforms face more extensive claims based on their market dominance and the severity of alleged harms.

    Meta (Facebook & Instagram)

    Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, faces the most extensive litigation portfolio among defendants, with plaintiffs alleging the company possessed internal research documenting severe mental health impacts on teenage users yet continued deploying features designed to maximize engagement regardless of harm to young people’s psychological wellbeing. According to documents revealed by whistleblower Frances Haugen in congressional testimony and subsequent investigations, Meta’s own studies showed that Instagram made body image issues worse for one in three teenage girls, yet the company allegedly suppressed these findings while publicly downplaying risks to youth mental health. The claims center on allegations that Meta deliberately targeted young users with addictive features despite knowing the platforms caused depression, anxiety, eating disorders, and suicidal ideation among vulnerable populations.

    TikTok

    TikTok’s algorithm, which plaintiffs describe as uniquely powerful in creating compulsive usage patterns, allegedly employs sophisticated machine learning to identify and exploit individual psychological vulnerabilities. The platform’s “For You Page” creates what families characterize as an endless stream of personalized content calibrated to maximize watch time without regard for users’ wellbeing, mental health, or real-world responsibilities, serving videos designed to trigger dopamine responses that keep users scrolling for hours even when they consciously want to stop. Beyond the algorithmic manipulation, TikTok faces additional scrutiny for features like beauty filters that allegedly contribute to body dysmorphia and viral challenges that may encourage dangerous behavior among impressionable youth seeking social validation through platform engagement.

    Snapchat

    Snapchat’s disappearing message feature, while marketed as privacy-protecting, allegedly facilitates cyberbullying, sexual exploitation, and drug dealing by creating an environment where harmful content vanishes before parents or authorities can intervene to protect vulnerable users. The platform’s “Snapstreaks” feature, which rewards consecutive days of interaction between users, allegedly creates social pressure and anxiety that disrupts sleep, schoolwork, and healthy development patterns among adolescents who feel compelled to maintain streaks even during family vacations, school exams, or other times when they should be focusing on real-world priorities.

    YouTube

    YouTube, owned by Google, faces claims that its recommendation algorithm deliberately serves increasingly extreme content to maintain engagement, potentially radicalizing young viewers or exposing them to harmful material that exacerbates existing mental health conditions, with the platform’s autoplay feature ensuring that users continue consuming content even after they’ve found what they initially searched for.

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    Platform-Specific Harmful Features

    Social media platforms employ multiple design features that plaintiffs allege are deliberately engineered to create addiction and maximize engagement regardless of harm to users.

    Infinite Scroll

    The infinite scroll mechanism, now ubiquitous across social media platforms, represents what plaintiffs describe as a deliberately addictive design choice that hijacks natural stopping points. Unlike traditional media with clear endpoints—a book’s final page, a television show’s credits, a newspaper’s back section—infinite scroll ensures users never reach a natural conclusion, instead serving an endless stream of content calibrated to maintain engagement regardless of time spent or psychological impact on the user. This feature, combined with variable ratio reinforcement schedules similar to those used in slot machines and other gambling mechanisms, allegedly creates powerful psychological dependencies that young users cannot resist without significant intervention.

    Like & Validation Systems

    Like and validation systems across platforms allegedly exploit adolescents’ heightened sensitivity to peer approval during a developmental stage when social acceptance drives behavior and social rejection can trigger severe emotional distress. Platforms deliberately delay notifications to maximize dopamine release when they finally arrive, batch likes to create anticipation and repeated checking behaviors, and use read receipts to generate social anxiety about whether messages have been seen and why responses haven’t arrived—all tactics designed to keep users constantly checking their devices even during activities that should command their full attention.

    Push Notifications

    Push notification strategies employed by social media companies allegedly use sophisticated psychological manipulation to draw users back to platforms even when they’re trying to disengage or focus on real-world activities like homework, family time, or sleep. Platforms allegedly test thousands of notification variations to identify which combinations of timing, wording, and content most effectively trigger compulsive checking behaviors. The strategic deployment of FOMO-inducing notifications—”Your friend posted for the first time in a while,” “You have memories to look back on,” “See who viewed your profile”—allegedly creates anxiety and compulsion that disrupts sleep, concentration, and healthy daily routines.

    Infinite Scroll

    The infinite scroll mechanism, now ubiquitous across social media platforms, represents what plaintiffs describe as a deliberately addictive design choice that hijacks natural stopping points. Unlike traditional media with clear endpoints—a book’s final page, a television show’s credits, a newspaper’s back section—infinite scroll ensures users never reach a natural conclusion, instead serving an endless stream of content calibrated to maintain engagement regardless of time spent or psychological impact on the user. This feature, combined with variable ratio reinforcement schedules similar to those used in slot machines and other gambling mechanisms, allegedly creates powerful psychological dependencies that young users cannot resist without significant intervention.

    Like & Validation Systems

    Like and validation systems across platforms allegedly exploit adolescents’ heightened sensitivity to peer approval during a developmental stage when social acceptance drives behavior and social rejection can trigger severe emotional distress. Platforms deliberately delay notifications to maximize dopamine release when they finally arrive, batch likes to create anticipation and repeated checking behaviors, and use read receipts to generate social anxiety about whether messages have been seen and why responses haven’t arrived—all tactics designed to keep users constantly checking their devices even during activities that should command their full attention.

    Push Notifications

    Push notification strategies employed by social media companies allegedly use sophisticated psychological manipulation to draw users back to platforms even when they’re trying to disengage or focus on real-world activities like homework, family time, or sleep. Platforms allegedly test thousands of notification variations to identify which combinations of timing, wording, and content most effectively trigger compulsive checking behaviors. The strategic deployment of FOMO-inducing notifications—”Your friend posted for the first time in a while,” “You have memories to look back on,” “See who viewed your profile”—allegedly creates anxiety and compulsion that disrupts sleep, concentration, and healthy daily routines.

    Mental Health Injuries in Youth Social Media Cases

    The psychological harm alleged in these cases extends far beyond temporary sadness or normal adolescent mood fluctuations.

    Depression and Anxiety Disorders

    Depression and anxiety disorders represent the most common mental health injuries cited in legal filings, with plaintiffs presenting medical documentation of clinical diagnoses directly linked to platform use patterns and content exposure that algorithms deliberately served to vulnerable users. Young users allegedly develop major depressive disorder after prolonged exposure to social comparison, cyberbullying, and algorithmic content that reinforces negative thought patterns, requiring intensive therapy, medication management, and sometimes hospitalization to address symptoms that can persist for years even after platform use ceases. The constant pressure to maintain online personas, respond to messages immediately, and achieve validation through likes and comments creates chronic stress that manifests as generalized anxiety disorder, panic attacks, and social anxiety that persists even when users attempt to reduce their platform engagement. According to CDC Youth Risk Behavior Survey data from 2021, 57% of teenage girls reported persistent sadness or hopelessness, while 30% seriously considered suicide and 13% actually attempted it.

    Eating Disorders and Body Dysmorphia

    Eating disorders and body dysmorphia have reached what some clinicians describe as epidemic proportions among young social media users. Platforms’ beauty filters, influencer culture promoting unrealistic body standards, and algorithm-promoted content allegedly contribute to distorted body image and dangerous eating behaviors that require intensive medical intervention to address. Claims describe how platforms knowingly promote content glorifying extreme thinness, cosmetic procedures, and unrealistic beauty standards to vulnerable users already showing signs of body image concerns, with algorithms identifying and targeting these users with additional similar content that reinforces harmful thought patterns. Medical experts link the rise in anorexia, bulimia, and other eating disorders directly to social media exposure, with treatment often requiring months of intensive therapy, nutritional rehabilitation, and family intervention.

    Self-Harm and Suicidal Ideation

    Self-harm behaviors and suicidal ideation represent the most severe outcomes associated with platform use, with emergency room visits for these issues rising dramatically since platforms achieved widespread adoption among youth. Sleep disruption caused by late-night scrolling, notification anxiety, and fear of missing out creates a cascade of mental health impacts, from attention deficit issues and academic decline to mood dysregulation and increased risk-taking behaviors that compound the primary psychological injuries. The academic performance decline associated with compulsive platform use often serves as the first visible sign of harm, with previously successful students experiencing dramatic drops in grades, attendance problems, and loss of interest in educational goals that once motivated them.

    Age-Specific Vulnerability Factors

    The developing adolescent brain presents unique vulnerabilities that platforms allegedly exploit for profit. The prefrontal cortex responsible for impulse control and decision-making remains under construction until approximately age twenty-five, making teenagers uniquely susceptible to addictive design features that might be merely engaging for adults but become compulsively addictive for users whose cognitive control systems haven’t fully developed. Neuroscience research demonstrates that adolescents experience heightened dopamine responses to rewards compared to adults, while simultaneously lacking the cognitive control systems necessary to regulate reward-seeking behavior—a combination that platforms allegedly exploit through variable reinforcement schedules and intermittent reward systems designed to maximize engagement regardless of harm to developing brains.

    The psychological harm alleged in these cases extends far beyond temporary sadness or normal adolescent mood fluctuations.

    Building Your Social Media Harm Case

    Pursuing legal action requires careful documentation that establishes both the severity of your child’s injuries and the connection to platform use.

    1. Preserve Platform Data

      Parents should preserve all platform data through official download tools, including usage statistics that show daily time spent on each platform, message histories that may document cyberbullying or harmful interactions, and content interaction records that demonstrate how algorithms targeted their child with harmful material designed to exploit their specific psychological vulnerabilities.

    2. Gather Medical Records

      Medical records must establish not only the diagnosis of mental health conditions but also the temporal relationship between platform use escalation and symptom onset. Particular attention should be paid to emergency room visits that document acute mental health crises, therapy notes that reference social media’s role in your child’s psychological struggles, and medication prescriptions that document the severity and progression of injuries requiring pharmaceutical intervention.

    3. Document Screen Time

      Screen time data from devices provides crucial objective evidence of addiction patterns, showing daily usage hours that may reach six, eight, or even twelve hours per day, session frequency that demonstrates compulsive checking behaviors, and the times when platform use disrupted normal activities like sleep or school attendance.

    4. Track Treatment Costs

      Treatment cost documentation should include not only direct medical expenses but also therapy copays that accumulate over months or years of treatment, prescription costs for medications managing depression or anxiety, missed work for parents attending appointments or managing mental health crises, and educational support services required to address academic impacts like tutoring or alternative schooling arrangements.

    5. Maintain Parental Journals

      Parents should maintain journals documenting behavioral changes they observed, concerning content their child encountered or shared with them, and efforts to limit platform use that failed due to addictive design features that made voluntary cessation impossible without complete device removal—contemporaneous records that can powerfully illustrate the day-to-day reality of watching your child struggle with platform addiction.

    Settlement Values in Social Media Addiction Cases

    Understanding potential compensation requires recognizing that these cases remain in early stages, with no established settlement history to provide definitive guidance.

    Tier 1 - Less Severe Impacts

    Tier 1 cases involving less severe impacts—such as mild anxiety requiring outpatient therapy, temporary academic struggles that resolved with intervention, or social difficulties that improved after platform cessation—may result in compensation primarily covering medical expenses and modest amounts for pain and suffering. These cases typically involve children who experienced negative effects but recovered relatively quickly once platform use was addressed through parental intervention and professional support.

    Tier 2 - Moderate Harm

    Tier 2 moderate harm cases, where children required extensive therapy, medication management, experienced significant academic setbacks, or developed persistent mental health conditions requiring ongoing treatment, may see higher compensation reflecting not only past medical expenses but also future treatment needs, educational remediation costs, and compensation for the substantial disruption to normal adolescent development. These claims often involve documented diagnoses of major depression, generalized anxiety disorder, or eating disorders that required months or years of treatment to address, with ongoing therapy needs that may extend into adulthood.

    Tier 3 - Severe Injuries

    Tier 3 severe injury cases—involving suicide attempts, extended psychiatric hospitalization, severe self-harm requiring medical intervention, or permanent psychological injuries that may affect the child throughout adulthood—may result in substantially higher compensation. Factors affecting valuation include the child’s age at onset of platform use, duration and intensity of addiction patterns, quality of medical documentation linking injuries to platform use, and whether internal company documents demonstrate specific targeting or knowledge of harm to similar users.

    Additional Valuation Factors

    Insurance coverage for ongoing mental health treatment, lost educational opportunities that affect lifetime earning capacity, and the need for long-term psychological support all factor into evaluations that experienced attorneys can properly assess. Parents should understand that while general ranges provide context, each case’s unique circumstances—particularly the quality of evidence linking platform use to specific injuries—ultimately determines potential recovery. The collective strength of MDL proceedings may influence individual outcomes, as patterns emerging from hundreds of cases can establish platform liability more definitively than isolated claims might achieve.

    Understanding potential compensation requires recognizing that these cases remain in early stages, with no established settlement history to provide definitive guidance.

    The Path Forward: Filing Your Social Media Addiction Claim

    Taking the first step requires no financial commitment or risk on your part.

    1. Free Case Evaluation

      The free case evaluation process begins with a confidential consultation where experienced attorneys review your child’s platform usage history, mental health impacts, and treatment records to determine whether you may have a viable claim against social media companies. During this initial meeting, which you can schedule by calling (314) 408-6136, attorneys will explain how the MDL process works, what evidence you’ll need to gather, and realistic timelines for resolution—all without any upfront costs or obligations to proceed unless you’re comfortable moving forward.

    2. Confidential Consultation

      Our team understands that discussing your child’s mental health struggles requires trust and sensitivity. Every consultation remains completely confidential while providing honest assessments of your legal options, including potential challenges you may face and the strength of evidence needed to pursue compensation successfully.

    3. No Upfront Costs

      The no upfront costs structure means families can pursue justice without financial barriers, as attorneys working on these cases typically advance all litigation expenses and only collect fees if they successfully recover compensation for your family through settlement or verdict. This contingency fee arrangement aligns your attorney’s interests with yours—they only succeed when you do.

    4. MDL Participation

      MDL participation benefits include access to evidence discovered by hundreds of other cases, coordinated expert witnesses who can explain complex technical and psychological concepts to judges and juries, and the collective negotiating power that comes from presenting platforms with thousands of similar claims that demonstrate patterns of harm rather than isolated incidents. Your individual case maintains its unique identity within the MDL structure, meaning your child’s specific injuries and damages remain the focus even while benefiting from shared litigation resources.

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    Meta’s Internal Documents and Whistleblower Evidence

    The foundation of many claims rests on revelations that emerged from Frances Haugen’s congressional testimony and document disclosure in 2021.

    Internal Research Revelations

    These internal documents revealed that Meta conducted extensive research on how Instagram affects teenage mental health, with studies allegedly showing the company understood its platforms caused significant psychological harm to young users yet chose to prioritize growth and engagement over implementing safety features that might have protected vulnerable adolescents. The company’s own research reportedly found that teens blamed Instagram for increases in anxiety and depression, with the platform making body image issues worse for one in three girls—findings that Meta allegedly concealed while publicly claiming social media’s effects were mostly positive or neutral.

    Evidence of Deliberate Indifference

    These internal communications form the cornerstone of legal claims because they may demonstrate not merely negligence but deliberate indifference to known harms. Plaintiffs argue that Meta not only knew about these harms but actively worked to increase platform addictiveness through features designed to exploit psychological vulnerabilities in developing brains, with product teams allegedly instructed to find ways around Apple’s screen time controls and parental restrictions to maintain teen usage levels. The documents allegedly show executives celebrating metrics like “daily active users” and “time on platform” among teenage demographics, treating adolescent engagement as a business success even when internal researchers warned that the same engagement patterns correlated with increased rates of depression, anxiety, and suicidal ideation.

    Rejected Safety Features

    Whistleblower testimony has revealed that Meta allegedly rejected or deprioritized safety features that might have protected young users if those features threatened engagement metrics or advertising revenue. Former employees describe a corporate culture where growth trumped safety, with teams allegedly instructed to maximize engagement among young users despite knowing that the psychological mechanisms driving that engagement—social comparison, fear of missing out, validation-seeking through likes and comments—caused measurable harm to adolescent mental health. These revelations provide plaintiffs with powerful evidence that social media companies didn’t merely fail to protect children through oversight or negligence; rather, they allegedly made calculated decisions to harm them for profit, a distinction that may support claims for punitive damages under Missouri law (RSMo §510.261) if plaintiffs can demonstrate that platforms acted with deliberate indifference to the rights and safety of young users.

    Additional Valuation Factors

    Insurance coverage for ongoing mental health treatment, lost educational opportunities that affect lifetime earning capacity, and the need for long-term psychological support all factor into evaluations that experienced attorneys can properly assess. Parents should understand that while general ranges provide context, each case’s unique circumstances—particularly the quality of evidence linking platform use to specific injuries—ultimately determines potential recovery. The collective strength of MDL proceedings may influence individual outcomes, as patterns emerging from hundreds of cases can establish platform liability more definitively than isolated claims might achieve.

    The foundation of many claims rests on revelations that emerged from Frances Haugen’s congressional testimony and document disclosure in 2021.

    Missouri Legal Rights for Parents of Affected Youth

    Missouri law provides clear pathways for parents to pursue legal action on behalf of their minor children who have suffered injuries. Parents have standing to pursue claims and the authority to make litigation decisions and manage any recovery on the child’s behalf until they reach age eighteen, when they gain the legal capacity to make their own decisions about continuing or settling claims. The state’s five-year statute of limitations for personal injury claims (RSMo §516.120) provides a reasonable timeframe for recognizing platform-related harm and pursuing legal remedies, while the tolling provision for minors (RSMo §516.170) ensures that children’s rights remain protected even if parents don’t immediately recognize the connection between platform use and mental health injuries.

    Parents in St. Louis, Kansas City, and throughout Missouri should understand that they may file claims not only for their child’s direct injuries but also for their own damages. These include medical expenses paid for therapy, psychiatric care, and hospitalizations, lost wages from attending appointments or managing mental health crises, and the emotional distress of watching their child suffer from platform-induced psychological harm. The Missouri Merchandising Practices Act may provide additional avenues for recovery if platforms engaged in deceptive practices regarding the safety of their products for minor users, though plaintiffs primarily pursue these cases under product liability and negligence theories that don’t require proving deceptive advertising.

    Educational loss claims under Missouri law can include not only tutoring and remedial education costs but also the long-term economic impact of delayed graduation, lost scholarship opportunities, and reduced college prospects caused by platform-induced mental health crises that disrupted critical years of academic development. The state’s approach to emotional distress claims requires objective medical proof of psychological injury, which mental health diagnoses, therapy records, and psychiatric evaluations can establish. Working with Missouri attorneys who understand both state law nuances and the federal MDL process ensures families can pursue maximum recovery while navigating the complex procedural requirements these cases involve.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How do social media addiction lawsuits differ from other product liability cases?

    These lawsuits represent a novel application of product liability law to digital platforms, with plaintiffs arguing that software algorithms and user interface designs constitute “products” that can be defectively designed just like physical items. Unlike traditional product liability cases involving tangible defects you can see and touch—a faulty brake system or contaminated medication—these claims focus on psychological manipulation through code, making the harm less visible but equally real in terms of documented mental health impacts requiring medical treatment. The evidence in platform addiction cases relies heavily on internal company documents showing knowledge of harm, behavioral psychology research demonstrating how design features exploit cognitive vulnerabilities, and pattern recognition across millions of users rather than physical testing or engineering analysis of mechanical failures.

    What evidence do I need to prove my child's social media addiction?

    Proving harm requires a combination of medical documentation showing diagnosed mental health conditions, platform usage data demonstrating excessive or compulsive use patterns, and evidence linking the timeline of platform engagement to psychological deterioration. Essential evidence includes psychiatric evaluations that establish clinical diagnoses, therapy records documenting treatment for platform-related mental health issues, prescription medications for anxiety or depression that began after intensive platform use started, school records showing academic decline correlating with increased usage, and screen time reports documenting usage patterns that demonstrate compulsive behavior. Parents should also preserve any communications where their child expresses distress about platform use, requests help controlling their usage, or describes specific harmful content they encountered that contributed to their psychological struggles.

    Can I file a lawsuit if my child is still using social media?

    Yes, you may pursue legal action even if your child continues using social media platforms. Addiction itself demonstrates the inability to stop despite harmful consequences—a key element of these claims that actually strengthens rather than weakens your case. Current platform use doesn’t negate past injuries or ongoing harm, and many children require professional help to successfully disengage from addictive platforms designed specifically to make voluntary cessation difficult or impossible. The legal focus remains on whether platforms deliberately designed addictive features that harmed your child, not whether they’ve successfully overcome that addiction yet, though evidence of failed attempts to quit despite negative consequences can powerfully demonstrate the addictive nature of the platforms’ design.

    What mental health conditions qualify for social media lawsuits?

    Qualifying mental health conditions include major depressive disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, eating disorders (anorexia, bulimia, binge eating disorder), body dysmorphic disorder, self-harm behaviors, and suicidal ideation or attempts that required medical intervention. Additionally, conditions like ADHD exacerbated by platform use, sleep disorders caused by compulsive nighttime scrolling, and social anxiety preventing real-world interaction may qualify if properly documented by medical professionals. The key requirement is medical documentation linking these conditions to platform use through temporal correlation—showing that symptoms began or significantly worsened after intensive platform use started—and professional assessment by psychiatrists or psychologists who can establish the connection between platform exposure and psychological harm.

    How long do I have to file a social media harm lawsuit in Missouri?

    Missouri law provides a five-year statute of limitations for personal injury claims (RSMo §516.120), meaning parents generally have five years from when they discovered or should have discovered the connection between platform use and their child’s injuries to file a lawsuit. However, Missouri’s tolling statute (RSMo §516.170) pauses this deadline for minors until they turn eighteen, potentially extending the filing window significantly beyond the standard five-year period. Because determining when a claim “accrued” can be complex with gradual-onset psychological injuries that develop over months or years of platform use, consulting with an attorney promptly ensures you don’t miss important deadlines while also allowing time to fully document the extent of your child’s injuries and treatment needs.

    Are social media lawsuits class actions or individual cases?

    These lawsuits currently proceed as individual cases consolidated in MDL No. 3047 for coordinated pretrial proceedings, not as a traditional class action where one lawsuit represents everyone with similar claims. This structure allows each family to maintain their unique damage claims specific to their child’s injuries while benefiting from shared discovery that might reveal internal company documents, expert witnesses who can explain complex technical and psychological concepts, and coordinated legal strategies developed by experienced mass tort attorneys. The MDL process may lead to global settlement negotiations that resolve many cases simultaneously, but families retain the right to pursue individual trials if settlement offers don’t adequately compensate their specific injuries and losses.

    Why Choose OnderLaw

    At OnderLaw, we recognize that these cases represent more than legal claims. They embody parents’ fight to protect their children from platforms that allegedly prioritized profits over youth safety, deliberately engineering addictive features despite internal research showing severe mental health consequences for vulnerable adolescents. Our mass tort team brings decades of experience holding corporations accountable when their products cause widespread harm, and we’re now applying that expertise to help Missouri families from St. Louis to Kansas City seek justice against companies whose platforms may have contributed to the youth mental health crisis affecting communities nationwide.
    Our team understands that discussing your child’s mental health struggles requires trust and sensitivity. Every consultation remains completely confidential while providing honest assessments of your legal options, including potential challenges you may face and the strength of evidence needed to pursue compensation successfully. The no upfront costs structure means families can pursue justice without financial barriers, as attorneys working on these cases typically advance all litigation expenses and only collect fees if they successfully recover compensation for your family through settlement or verdict.

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    Get Started with Your Social Media Harm Claim Today

    Missouri’s five-year statute of limitations for personal injury claims (RSMo §516.120) applies, though minors receive special protection under Missouri law (RSMo §516.170) that tolls the deadline until they reach age eighteen.

    If social media platforms have harmed your child’s mental health, you deserve to know that legal options exist—and that speaking with an experienced attorney costs you nothing, with no upfront fees and no obligation to proceed unless we secure compensation for your family.

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