3 Proven Ways Smartphones and Screen Time are Harming Children�s Health
For years, the cell phone industry has fought litigation and has tried to prevent warning
labels from being added to their products, and in a 2017 landmark case in an Italian
court, a judge even ruled that excessive cell phone use can in fact result in brain cancer.
While it may take a number of years to develop, cancer is not the only negative health effect
using today�s smart phones, and for children, the impacts of handheld fixation technologies
are rather broad.
Even Steve Jobs, co-founder of Apple, is well-known for not permitting his own children to use
iPads, smartphones and other handheld devices, noting how addictive and openly available
devices like these are in our society today.
�� when he [Steve Jobs] was asked �Your kids must love the iPad?� He said �Actually
we don�t allow the iPad in the home.
We think it�s too dangerous for them in effect.� The reason why he said that was
because he recognized just how addictive the iPad was as a vehicle for delivering things
to people.
That once you had the iPad in front of you, or when you took it away from the home with
you, you�d always have access to these platforms that were very addictive.
That were hard to resist.� ~Adam Alter, author of Irresistible: The Rise of Addictive
Technology and the Business of Keeping Us Hooked
Here are several other documented ways in which screen-time and smartphones are negatively
impacting children�s health.
1.
Literally Turning Them Into Addicts
As Jobs says, the devices are highly addictive, meaning they re-train the brain�s pleasure
and reward centers, interfering with the a child�s natural responses to the joy, while
heavily distracting them from life.
These devices are digital drugs, as habit-forming as cocaine and ubiquitous in our society.
�This addictive effect is why Dr. Peter Whybrow, director of neuroscience at UCLA,
calls screens �electronic cocaine� and Chinese researchers call them �digital heroin.�
In fact, Dr. Andrew Doan, the head of addiction research for the Pentagon and the US Navy
� who has been researching video game addiction � calls video games and screen technologies
�digital pharmakeia� (Greek for drug).
That�s right � your kid�s brain on Minecraft looks like a brain on drugs.
No wonder we have a hard time peeling kids from their screens and find our little ones
agitated when their screen time is interrupted.
In addition, hundreds of clinical studies show that screens increase depression, anxiety
and aggression and can even lead to psychotic-like features where the video gamer loses touch
with reality.�
Some academics even suggest that these devices are so addictive they should come with a health
warning:
�University of Derby finds smartphone users in study spent average 3.6 hours a day on
devices, often causing severe distraction from relationships and �real life.�
2.
Impacts Their Mood and the Emotional System
Overexposure to screen time with these devices negatively affects the mood and emotional
systems of children, and as many studies have shown, these devices can make children moody,
lazy and crazy, even harming their memory.
�Children or teens who are �revved up� and prone to rages or�alternatively�who
are depressed and apathetic have become disturbingly commonplace.
Chronically irritable children are often in a state of abnormally high arousal, and may
seem �wired and tired.� That is, they�re agitated but exhausted.
Because chronically high arousal levels impact memory and the ability to relate, these kids
are also likely to struggle academically and socially.� [Source]
Over time, these symptoms can develop into depression, anxiety, and other mental disorders,
increasing the risk of children being diagnosed and labeled as having ADHD or bipolar disorder.
Dr. Aric Sigman, an associate fellow of the British Psychological Society and a Fellow
of Britain�s Royal Society of Medicine, says overuse of these devices by small children
can cause permanent damage as it impedes the developmental process of children, and can
cause them social problems as well as physical issues such as harming eyesight.
�Too much screen time too soon, he says, �is the very thing impeding the development
of the abilities that parents are so eager to foster through the tablets.
The ability to focus, to concentrate, to lend attention, to sense other people�s attitudes
and communicate with them, to build a large vocabulary�all those abilities are harmed.��
3.
Destroys Their Posture
The developing body is especially prone to developing abnormalities in the spine with
overuse of handheld technologies, potentially causing lifelong health issues.
Doctors are now seeing cases of �text neck� in children as young as 7 years-old.
�A leading Australian chiropractor has warned that �text neck� � a condition often
brought on by bending over phones and tablets for several hours at a time � is becoming
an epidemic.
Dr James Carter, based in Niagara Park, on the NSW Central Coast, said the relatively
new condition can lead to anxiety and �depression as well as spinal damage.
He revealed he had seen an �alarming increase� in the number of patients with the condition
over the past few years and said 50 per cent of them are school-age teenagers.�
The following x-ray images taken by Dr. Carter give a look at how badly text neck is affecting
children.
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