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Saturday, August 23, 2025

Dangers to using too much smart technology

by

Anna-Lisa Paul
2190 days ago
20190824
Registered Nurse Lisa Patino weighs Zion Andrews during the Back to School Check up Child Wellness Initiative at the Women’s Centre,
Mt Hope Women’s Hospital, Champs Fleurs, yesterday.

Registered Nurse Lisa Patino weighs Zion Andrews during the Back to School Check up Child Wellness Initiative at the Women’s Centre, Mt Hope Women’s Hospital, Champs Fleurs, yesterday.

ANISTO ALVES

Smart tech­nol­o­gy can ac­tu­al­ly be dan­ger­ous to the health of adults and chil­dren if it is not used prop­er­ly or as rec­om­mend­ed.

While it has been known to lead to vi­sion im­pair­ment and obe­si­ty in some in­stances—of­fi­cials at the Pae­di­atric Emer­gency De­part­ment, Er­ic Williams Med­ical Sci­ences Com­plex (EWM­SC), Mt Hope are con­cerned as more per­sons are now pre­sent­ing with ail­ments such as “text thumbs,” “text wrists,” and “text necks.”

Is­su­ing a spe­cial ap­peal to par­ents to en­sure their young ones are su­per­vised when us­ing cell­phones, tablets, com­put­ers and oth­er smart de­vices—Reg­is­trar Dr Ra­bia Hy­dal-Mo­hammed said the neg­a­tive im­pact of so­cial me­dia was no longer a myth, it was now a re­al­i­ty.

Ad­dress­ing re­porters dur­ing the North Cen­tral Re­gion­al Health Au­thor­i­ty’s Back to School Child Well­ness Ini­tia­tive at the Mt Hope Women’s Cen­ter yes­ter­day, she shied away from mak­ing a judge­ment as she ac­knowl­edged the fast pace of life to­day.

She said: “That falls in the lap of many of us and I don’t want to be judge­men­tal be­cause par­ents do live a fast paced life.”

“You come home af­ter work and you are try­ing to cook, you are try­ing to clean and any sort of tech­nol­o­gy is the fall back and the chil­dren go for it.”

How­ev­er, she re­vealed: “We are see­ing text thumbs, text wrists and text necks com­ing to in­to the de­part­ment be­cause every­body’s pos­ture is bad.”

Hy­dal-Mo­hammed went fur­ther as she sought to en­light­en the pub­lic about the blue lights em­a­nat­ing from the smart de­vices.

She said: “I re­al­ly want to give ad­vice that blue lights em­a­nat­ing from any type of screen af­fects the body’s mela­tonin lev­els which helps put you in­to the rhythm of sleep, and by peo­ple hav­ing their phones al­ways look­ing at it, that blue light dis­rupts the rhythm.”

She said it was no won­der so many peo­ple were not get­ting the rec­om­mend­ed hours of sleep they re­quired.

Ex­press­ing con­cern about the dire con­se­quences for chil­dren, she added: “It is re­al­ly that our chil­dren are not get­ting enough sleep to learn and do their work, and play and be healthy.”

She warned per­sons of the pow­er of the PING!

“Do not charge cell­phones close to your bed be­cause we do not know the im­pact of all that ra­di­a­tion; charge them out­side and away and not un­der the pil­low; switch off mes­sage alerts; and man­age time on tech­nol­o­gy wise­ly,” she con­clud­ed.

Echo­ing sim­i­lar sen­ti­ments was Head, Pae­di­atric Emer­gency De­part­ment, Dr Joanne F Paul who said in­ter­na­tion­al re­search had shown that when­ev­er a per­son re­ceived a mes­sage on their cell­phone, their dopamine lev­els in­creased.

De­scrib­ing it as “hap­py juice,” she said it could be­come ad­dic­tive.

Dopamine is a chem­i­cal found nat­u­ral­ly in the hu­man body. It is a neu­ro­trans­mit­ter, mean­ing it sends sig­nals from the body to the brain.

It plays a part in con­trol­ling the move­ments a per­son makes, as well as their emo­tion­al re­spons­es.

The right bal­ance of dopamine is vi­tal for both phys­i­cal and men­tal well-be­ing.

Liken­ing it to per­sons suf­fer­ing with mar­i­jua­na and nico­tine ad­dic­tions and the sim­i­lar “high” these users ex­pe­ri­ence, Paul said: “Cell­phones are do­ing the same thing.”

“The rea­son why our kids and we our­selves are do­ing it, it’s be­cause they are ad­dict­ed to it.”

She ad­vised that a child or ado­les­cent brain was more sen­si­tive to any type of ad­dic­tion and there­fore, “We have to take this se­ri­ous­ly.”

Both Hy­dal-Mo­hammed and Paul ad­vised par­ents to en­sure their kids were read­ing, play­ing games, eat­ing healthy, and ex­er­cis­ing to en­sure a bal­anced lifestyle.

They said it was on­ly way to keep them fit and al­so stave off the ear­ly on­set of chron­ic non-com­mu­ni­ca­ble dis­eases lat­er on. Paul added that just like the year­ly ser­vice per­sons per­form on their ve­hi­cles and ap­pli­ances, so too—par­ents need­ed to en­sure the med­ical check-up of their young ones was a pri­or­i­ty.

Gen­er­al Man­ag­er, Pri­ma­ry Health Care Ser­vices, NCRHA, Dr Ab­dul Hamid said yes­ter­day’s ex­er­cise had been in­stru­men­tal in de­tect­ing a num­ber of chil­dren with op­ti­cal and den­tal is­sues, along with a num­ber of per­sons who pre­sent­ed with el­e­vat­ed BMIs.

Rec­om­mend­ed screen times for chil­dren us­ing a smart de­vice is as fol­lows:

1. In the ze­ro to two age cat­e­go­ry Ze­ro hours.

2. In the two to five age cat­e­go­ry - One hour max­i­mum.

3. Old­er than that­­—no more than one to two or three hours (but users must take a break).


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