Sachin Kapoor | 23 Apr, 2024
In 2017, Frontiers in Psychiatry published ‘An Update Overview on
Brain Imaging Studies of Internet Gaming Disorder’ as part of their
research on IGD or Internet Gaming Disorder.
The conclusion was startling:
“There is an emerging
evidence that IGD is associated with similar brain mechanisms
responsible for substance use disorders. The brain imaging studies in
IGD show similarity in brain mechanisms between IGD and substance use
disorder and therefore support the classification of IGD as a behavioral
addiction.”
In simple words,
-- Screen addiction is an addiction classified as per WHO
-- Its impact on the brain is similar to substance (e.g. Narcotics like Cocaine) use addiction
In
short, there may be an irreversible long term impact on the brains of
children addicted to Internet games. However the question arises if only
internet games are to be blamed or the problem is broader. In 2019,
researchers made an attempt to bring together all the use cases under
the umbrella of SmUD (Smartphone Use Disorder).
It was the
research of Joel Billieux who provided clear pathways into problematic
mobile phone usage. He emphasised on the following four pathways for
SmUD:
-- Impulsive
-- Relationship
-- Extraversion
-- Cyber Addiction
Billieux
further broke down cyber addiction into online gambling, online video
games, online sex, social networks and mobile phone, thereby defining a
spectrum of cyber addictions
Fig 1: Spectrum of cyber addictions
Many
parents despair at the amount of time their kids spend glued to
screens, as a recent study by Kantar for Amazon India showed. However,
they may not be in a position to co-relate symptoms in a child's
behaviour with cyber or mobile addiction.
A research published by
national library of medicine suggests that both physical and mental
wellbeing can be adversely affected by too much screen use. It divided
students into low cellphone usage and high Cell Phone usage groups and
came up with the following conclusions.
-- Physical: High Cell Phone usage group observed higher numbers of eye strain, neck pain, back pain, and gain in weight
-- Mental: High Cell Phone usage group were more likely to report loneliness, depression, and mood disorders
In
short, excessive phone usage is going to do you and your children harm.
And what you may be passing off as a lifestyle aberration, may be the
symptom of a larger disorder taking shape for e.g. eye strain and lack
of concentration may be the trigger point for ADHD (attention deficit
hyperactivity disorder) aggravated by years of mobile phone usage.
At
this point, it is important for us to introduce neurotransmitters,
especially dopamine commonly called the happiness hormone. But sudden
surges in dopamine release causes addiction, this is exactly what
cocaine or narcotics do inside our body. They release a lot of dopamine,
the brain responds less to the excess dopamine. Then we consume more to
release more dopamine. Eventually this cycle leads to mania,
hallucinations and delusions. Now, here is the fun fact: the reason you
can't put that mobile phone down is because it releases cheap and
plentiful dopamine in your brain. So you are on a high without consuming
anything, just by spending more and more time on a mobile screen on
gaming, gambling, sex or social networks!
A logical question
therefore is how many hours a day is classified as addiction. A few
researchers came up with a limit of 20 hours a week. But, this is hotly
contested and WHO has refrained from providing hour-based classification
of mobile addiction. Among practitioners a generally held view is that
the behaviour of the addict should be such that spending time on the
phone comes at the expense of normal life commitments. An often cited
example is that you have an exam or an assignment submission but you
skip it because you were unable to keep your mobile phone away.
You
may start wondering if this is such an important problem, considering
that 70 per cent of India’s population has smartphones. What is being
done to solve the problem? To begin with, is it being identified as a
problem? The bugle was sounded by Prime Minister Narendra Modi in his
Pariksha Pe Charcha wherein he highlighted the distractions mobile
phones may cause to students preparing for exams.
There is a lot
that needs to be done by different stakeholders like Educators, Health
Practitioners, Mobile Device Manufacturers, Mobile Gaming Companies.
However,
the biggest question to ask is for a parent themselves. When you hand
over a phone or a mobile device to a young child, are you aware you may
be starting a one-way cycle for impairing the potential of your own
child? What do you think you can do as a parent to change course midway?
If you are just starting out, what may be your alternatives to
entertain your newborn beyond the mobile screen? To all parents, the
question is “are you making your child addicted to cocaine”?
(The author is co-founder of ‘Trumsy’, an initiative to reduce screen time of children. His views do not necessarily reflect the views of SME Times)