Turning personal tragedy into a nationwide warning, a Virginia mother is urging parents to rethink the role of smartphones in their children’s lives, especially at night. Summer Bushman, from Salem, Virginia, lost her 10-year-old daughter Autumn to suicide earlier this year after months of bullying, both in person and online. In an interview with CBS News, she revealed that Autumn often used her phone in bed at night, a habit she now believes played a devastating role in her death. “She was looking at her phone just before it happened,” Summer said. “I wish I had never let her keep it in her room.”
A vibrant child silenced by screens and bullying
Autumn was, by all accounts, a bright and joyful child, a fourth-grade cheerleader who filled her home with music and dance. “She turned my living room into a stage,” her mother recalled. But behind her bubbly exterior, Autumn was struggling with relentless teasing about her braces and appearance.Like many children today, she sought connection through her phone, the same device that became a portal for cyberbullying. Late-night messages and social media comments compounded the hurt. What once might have ended at the school gates now followed her home, glowing quietly from her pillow.Psychologists call this the “24-hour schoolyard”, the digital extension of peer pressure and cruelty that leaves children little space to recover.
A tragic night and a painful awakening
On March 21, Autumn took her own life in her bedroom. When her mother found her, the phone’s screen was still on. “She used to say she needed her alarm,” Summer said softly. “And every morning when I went to wake her, the alarm was ringing.”The tragedy reflects a troubling pattern seen across the world. In the United States alone, youth suicide rates have risen by over 50% in the past decade, with growing evidence linking social media use, especially at night, to depression and self-harm. A 2019 Lancet Psychiatry study found that adolescents spending more than three hours a day on social media were twice as likely to report mental health issues.
The science behind sleep and screens
Late-night phone use does more than expose children to online harm; it directly affects their mental and physical health. Screens emit blue light, which suppresses the hormone melatonin, disrupting natural sleep cycles. Sleep deprivation, in turn, intensifies anxiety, impulsivity, and depression, all factors linked to suicide risk.A recent Virginia Tech study reinforced this connection. Researchers found that nearly 75% of adolescents who attempted suicide were using screens shortly before and that most incidents occurred after 8 p.m. “It’s pretty dangerous for bullied children to have their phones at night,” lead researcher Dr. Abhishek Reddy noted. “During the day, they have access to support, counsellors, teachers, parents. At night, that access disappears.”
A mother’s call for digital boundaries
For Summer, her daughter’s loss has become a mission. She now advocates for parents to remove phones from bedrooms, restrict nighttime use, and encourage healthier sleep routines. “If I could go back, I’d take that phone away,” she said. “She deserved to live a long, happy life. Now, I’ll never see her go to prom, get married, or chase her dreams.”Her message echoes growing calls among educators and child psychologists to delay smartphone access for young children altogether. Some schools in the US and Europe are now implementing “phone-free hours” or collecting devices during class to curb dependency.


