Article Internet addiction weakens the immunity

Technoglitch

Core Member
Spending too much time online may increase your risk of catching a cold or the flu as excessive internet use can damage immune function, a new study has claimed. The study by scientists from Swansea and Milan Universities evaluated 500 people aged 18 to 101 years old. It found that those who reported over-using internet also reported having more cold and flu symptoms than those people who did not report excessive internet use.

Around 40% of the sample reported mild or worse levels of internet addiction — a figure which did not differ between males and females. People with greater levels of internet addiction had around 30% more cold and flu symptoms than those with less problematic internet usage.

Previous research has shown that those who spend excessive time on internet experience greater sleep deprivation, have worse eating habits and less healthy diets, engage in less exercise, and tend to smoke and drink alcohol more. These behaviours can harm their immune system and increase vulnerability to diseases.

"We found that the impact of the internet on people's health was independent of a range of other factors, like depression, sleep deprivation, and loneliness, which are associated with high levels of internet use and also with poor health," said professor Phil Reed of Swansea University.

The study suggested that those who are addicted to internet may suffer from great stress when they are disconnected from it, and this cycle of stress and relief may lead to altered levels of cortisol — a hormone that impacts immune function.

"It may also be that those who spend a long time alone on the internet experience reduced immune function as a result of simply not having enough contact with others and their germs," said Reed.

The study also found that people reported using the internet on average for six hours a day, but a sizable minority of the sample used it for over 10 hours a day — most often connected with social media sites. There were also differences in the way men and women use internet—women using internet for social media and shopping more, and men reporting more use for gaming and pornography.

Net addiction can weaken immunity - The Times of India
 

scorpionking76

EntMnt Knight
The reason I think is sitting in front of the computer or playing with your smartphone will increase the radiation inside your body and the repecursion will be the study
 

Technoglitch

Core Member
College students who are addicted to the Internet are reporting positive as well as negative effects on their family relationships, reveals a study adding that the blame also goes to parents who do not set limits for either themselves or for kids when it comes to Internet use.

The study offers a first step toward the designing of effective interventions to address Problematic Internet Use (PIU) among the college-age population.

College students may be especially vulnerable to developing PIU for reasons that include free Internet access, large blocks of free time, courses that require its use and the sudden freedom from parental control and monitoring.

"We wanted to better understand students with Problematic Internet Use," said Susan Snyder from Georgia State University in the US adding "specifically, we wanted to understand how the Internet affects students' family relationships positively and negatively".

PIU is considered a behavioral addiction with characteristics similar to substance abuse disorders, the researchers said.

PIU has been linked with negative mental health consequences such as depression, attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder, hostility, social phobia, and alcohol abuse, self-injuries and sleep difficulties, they added.

Estimates of PIU across the US population run as high as 15 percent, revealed the study, published in the journal PLOS ONE.

The study focused on students who reported spending more than 25 hours a week on the Internet on non-school or non-work-related activities, and who experienced Internet-associated health or psychosocial problems, the researchers said.

On the plus side, these students reported that their time on the Internet often improved family connectedness when they and their family were apart.

However, their excessive Internet use led to increased family conflict and disconnectedness when family members were all together.

At the same time, many students with PIU felt their families also overused the Internet, with parents not setting enough limits for either parent or sibling Internet use, the findings showed.

The research team conducted a qualitative study of 27 US university students who self-identified themselves as problematic Internet users.

Internet Addiction Among Students Leading to Family Conflicts: Study | NDTV Gadgets360.com
 
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