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How Can We Fight Smartphone Addiction Among Young People?

An increasing number of young people say they can’t put down their phones. What are tech giants, parents, and treatment centres doing about it?

What is Smartphone Addiction?

Smartphone addiction is linked to internet addiction, or the compulsive overuse of the internet.

It typically involves overconsumption of social media, instant messaging, and entertainment, like games.

Smartphone addiction shows up in brain scans in the same way as other behavioural addictions: the reward centre of the brain lights up when the user thinks about being on their phone.

Typically, professionals determine the severity of an addiction by compiling a profile of the user’s smartphone habits and how these practices affect their daily life, socializing, moods, and sleep.

A number of negative consequences are linked to smartphone addiction, including sleep disorders, distracted driving, bad posture, anxiety and depression, and an overall decrease in productivity.

Some people have likened the condition to nomophobia—slang for “no mobile phobia,” or a fear of not having full access to one’s phone.

Signs of Smartphone Addiction

Do you worry that a teen in your life has become unhealthily dependent on their smartphone? Answer yes or no to the following questions:

  • Do they lose track of time while on their phone and fail to complete other tasks?

  • Do they get visibly anxious about running out of battery or losing access to their network or Wi-Fi?

  • Does time on their phone interfere with schoolwork?

  • Do others complain about how long they spend on their phones?

  • Do they grow irritable when they cannot check information on their phones, including that which is on social media and in email?

  • Do they grow irritable or fearful when they cannot receive calls or texts?

  • Do they get defensive about the amount of time they spend on their phone?

  • Have they tried, without success, to cut down the amount that they use their phone?

If you answered yes to at least four of these questions, the individual in question might be fixated on their smartphone to the point of addiction.

SHAFAHOME inpatient treatment provides those suffering from their smartphone addiction the opportunity to “detox” from their phone usage.

Here, SHAFAHOME, deliver our unique programme, which specialises in addictions where abstinence is not realistic—like with smartphones, where the goal is to manage their phone use rather than completely eliminate it.

Those who seek help with this receive 24-hour support to develop a healthier relationship with technology, and a new approach to daily life.

What Can Family Members Do to Contribute to a Teen’s Recovery?

Treatment doesn’t always end when an individual leaves SHAFAHOME—our centre provides valuable aftercare and support to its alumni.

If a teenager in your life is struggling with smartphone addiction, experts recommend a number of measures to assist them during their recovery. Parents can:

  • Put phones away during meal times

  • Designate specific windows during the day in which to check their own phones

  • Remove social media applications from their own phones to decrease the impulse to scan them

  • Pick up a new social or solitary activity to replace some smartphone usage

SHAFAHOME is committed to supporting both those who need treatment themselves and their families.

To find out more about whether you or someone you love could benefit from a healthier relationship with their smartphone, contact us for a free consultation.

( These Articles are the sole property of “ The Cabin Chiang Mai “ , they are its original authors )

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