Excellent news for governments and corporations from the above headline, although the percentage is way too low for their likes.
More people, subservient to corporation's data gather agenda that will enter the workforce, excellent!
See article:
University College London published a study
today which shows a startling number (or relieving, depending on how
you look at it) of modern university students could be addicted to their
smartphones. The study investigated the relationship between smartphone
addiction and sleep quality in 1,043 people aged 18 to 30 years old. It
had the young adults fill out a smartphone addiction questionnaire,
complete an adapted Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Score Index, and answer
questions both in person and online over a period of 40 days before the
answers were evaluated.
The study came out with a conclusion suggesting that 39% of young
adults may be addicted to their phones and suffer poor sleep because of
it. It took into account the number of hours the participants were using
their phones each day, measured sleep patterns, and noted decreases in
socializing as well as negative feelings such as anxiety when the
subjects were away from their smartphones.
The study states:
"The
overall prevalence of smartphone addiction was 38.9% (95%CI:
35.9–41.9%; n = 406/1,043). This includes 35.7% of males who were
addicted and 40.1% of females (Table 3). For participants aged under 21
years, 42.2% exhibited smartphone addiction, compared to 34.2 and 28.0%
of participants aged 22–25 years, and over 26 years, respectively. Of
participants who used their smartphone for 2 or less hours per day,
20.3% were addicted, compared to 53.9% of those who used it for more
than 5 h. Of those that stopped using their device more than an hour
before bedtime, 23.8% exhibited addiction, compared to 42.0% of those
stopping <30 min before bedtime."
The study claims that "validated addiction instrument should be used to
capture this phenomenon [of addiction]." University College London seems
to have done their best to use professional and certified indexes to
objectively measure each factor that was used to diagnose what
constituted "addiction," and references 47 other formerly published
studies on the subject. If nothing else, the study should at least bring
awareness to how much we are staring down at a screen when we could be
doing better things, and the study objectively correlates that more
screen time (especially later at night) leads to poorer sleep—which we
can probably all work to improve.
Source:phonearena.com
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