
More Evidence That Cell Phone Use Is Bad for You
If  health damage associated with mobile phones is in the news again, it is  not because of the electromagnetic waves that allegedly attack the  brain. But new research suggests excessive use of mobile phones can  hinder sleep, trigger fatigue and stress and cause mental problems like  depression and lack of concentration.   At the recent annual meeting of  the U.S. Associated Professional Sleep Societies (APSS), Dr. Gaby Badre  from Sahlgren's Academy in Gothenburg, Sweden said teenagers who use  their phones excessively are more prone to stress and fatigue. The study  focused on 21 healthy people between 14 and 20 years of age with  regular work or study hours and without sleep problems. The subjects  were divided into two groups. Compared to the control group, who made  less than five calls and/or sent five text messages a day, the  experimental group made more than 15 calls and/or sent 15 text messages a  day. And the latter suffered from increased restlessness, had more  careless lifestyles, consumed more stimulating beverages, and reported  difficulty falling asleep, disrupted sleep, and more susceptibility to  stress and fatigue. Only one-third of them ate breakfast, compared with  most in the control group.
The  correlation between phone use and mental state was shown by a study  published in the Korean Journal of Epidemiology in 2005 and conducted by  a team led by Prof. Kim Dong-hyun, of the Department of Social and  Preventive Medicine at Hallym University's College of Medicine. The team  studied 501 high school students in four groups according to their cell  phone use. Those who used them the least scored below 35 points on  depression, while those who used the most scored above 51. The latter  group also scored over 61 in terms of impulsive behavior. "We can't  generalize that cell phone use causes depression or impulsive behavior,  but at least we proved there's a connection," Kim said.   Han Doug-hyun,  a professor of neuropsychiatry at Chung-Ang University Medical Center,  says a brain wave scan of children with high mobile use showed a similar  sleep cycle pattern to that of a depression patient. Conversely,  depressive and impulsive children tended to rely more on mobile phones.    Then how much is too much? Mobile addiction is a novel concept  compared to drug or Internet addictions. But experts say those who are  at risk to becoming an addict are nervous without a phone, always tinker  with it and are at ease only after making a call or texting someone.  Doctors also note that texting can be more harmful than phone calls to  mental health and sleep levels. Prof. Ha ji-hyun, of the Department of  Psychiatry at Konkuk University Medical Center says, "A call is  simultaneous communication, but an SMS is not. You can get nervous while  waiting for the response."   Texting at night, itself a stimulus, seems  inimical to sleep. Prof. Hong Seung-chul of the Department of  Neuropsychiatry at Catholic University of Korea's St. Vincent's  Hospital, cites a survey saying sound and light from an incoming text  message disturbs sleep as it suppresses the hormone melatonin. It can  wake up the person or prevent a sound sleep.