Monday, October 23, 2006

Stanford School of Medicine research on Internet addiction

Lots of people are spending too much time on the Internet to the point where it becomes unhealthy. Is it a medical problem? The Stanford University School of Medicine have started studying the issue:

In a first-of-its-kind, telephone-based study, the researchers found that more than one out of eight Americans exhibited at least one possible sign of problematic Internet use. The findings follow results from previous, less rigorous studies that found a significant number of the population could be suffering from some form of Internet addiction.


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According to preliminary research, the typical affected individual is a single, college-educated, white male in his 30s, who spends approximately 30 hours a week on non-essential computer use. While some may hear this profile and assume that a person’s Internet “addiction” might actually be an extreme fondness for pornography, Aboujaoude stressed that pornography sites are just one part of the problem.

“Not surprisingly, online pornography and, to some degree, online gambling, have received the most attention—but users are as likely to use other sites, including chat rooms, shopping venues and special-interest Web sites,” he said. “Our survey did not track what specific Internet venues were the most frequented by respondents, but other studies, and our clinical experience, indicate that pornography is just one area of excessive Internet use.”



A summary of the study is available online and the full article appears in the October issue of CNS Spectrums: The International Journal of Neuropsychiatric Medicine, which is probably not on your local newstand but might be accessible through a university library.


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