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Warning! Your heavy smartphone is making you depressed

New York: It's been noted that the average samrt phone user checks a device 150 times a day, and nearly a third of users admit the fact that they're addicted to their devices. A new study

India TV News Desk India TV News Desk Updated on: March 03, 2016 13:54 IST
warning your heavy smartphone is making you depressed
warning your heavy smartphone is making you depressed

New York: It's been noted that the average samrt phone user checks a device 150 times a day, and nearly a third of users admit the fact that they're addicted to their devices. 

A new study has found that addiction to mobile phones and internet is related to anxiety and depression in teenagers.

Heavy cell phone use showed an increase in sleep disorders in men and an increase in depressive symptoms in both men and women.

However, there was no relationship between cell phone or internet use and negative mental health outcomes among participants who use these technologies to escape from boredom.

"There's a long history of the public fearing new technologies as they are deployed in society," said lead researcher Alejandro Lleras from University of Illinois in the US.

"This fear of new technology happened with televisions, video games and most recently, smartphones," Lleras added in the paper published in the journal Computers in Human behaviour.

The team surveyed over 300 university students with questionnaires that addressed the students' mental health, amount of cell phone and internet use and motivations for turning to their electronic devices.

The goal was to see if addictive and self-destructive behaviours with phones and the internet are related to mental health.

The findings showed that people who self-described as having really addictive style behaviours toward the internet and cell phones scored much higher on depression and anxiety scales.

Breaking addictive technology habits may provide an important supplemental treatment for addressing mental health issues such as general anxiety disorder or depression, the author noted.

"The interaction with the device is not going to make you depressed if you are just using it when you are bored. This should go toward soothing some of that public anxiety over new technology," Lleras explained.

( With IANS inputs) 

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