logo
Ireland will need dedicated clinic to deal with phone addiction, says professor

Ireland will need dedicated clinic to deal with phone addiction, says professor

BreakingNews.ie26-05-2025

There is no question Ireland will need a dedicated clinic to deal with phone overuse or addiction, professor of psychiatry at University College Dublin, Colin O'Gara said.
The number of mobile phones has spiralled with figures showing that there were 5.76 million devices in Ireland which is the equivalent of 1.1 per person in 2023 more than the current Irish population.
Advertisement
In the US, this figure is 1.2 mobile phones per person, according to figures from worddata.info.
Professor O'Gara, clinical professor of psychiatry at UCD says he has 'no doubt that there will be mobile phone detox (addiction) and rehabilitation clinics, and out-patient clinics dealing with this,' here in less than 15 year's time.
'This (dealing with mobile device overuse or addiction) will be a mainstay treatment."
'There is an existential change in personal device usage due to the amount of GP referrals that have become more and more difficult to keep up with.
Advertisement
"Plainly, this is a massive issue and it will be bigger and bigger in time and such clinics will be needed without a doubt.'
Prof O'Gara said he has been seeing this at the cold-face of addiction since 2013 and said we are all on the spectrum to overuse (diagnosed as internet use disorder) in some way and some people are using it way too much.
The apps on phones are also allowing people to partake in gambling, gaming, pornography and shopping which are addictions themselves.
Within mobile phone usage, are what Prof O'Gara calls, 'sub classifications' where the device is used as a distraction, an emotional regulator, impactor on tolerance and primacy being a decline in other activities.
Advertisement
'As a result of this there is psychiatric comorbidity of anxiety and a decline in a person's own well-being.'
For gambling and gaming addictions some individuals are clinically prescribed an opioid to help with their treatment, it is now believed by some clinicians, that the use of such medication will not be far off when it comes to treating extreme phone overuse.
Central Statistics Office (CSO) figures show that the majority of internet users or 94 per cent used the internet daily while almost all internet users aged 16 to 44 years had gone online everyday or almost daily, 96 per cent of people aged between 45 to 59 years used the internet daily. This compared with 72 per cent of older internet users aged 75 years plus.
Almost half of us (47 per cent) use our smartphones during meals and 70 per cent spend too much time on devices, a new Deloitte survey has found.
Advertisement
A survey of 1,000 people in Ireland was carried out as part of Deloitte's Digital Consumer Trends report earlier this year which also shows that three-quarters of adults or 74 per cent tend to use their mobile phones as soon as they wake up while 54 per cent say they tend to stay awake later than planned because of their devices. Over one third (34 per cent) check their phone at least 50 times a day and 15 per cent do so more than 100 times.
Almost half of those surveyed or 47 per cent admit they now use their smartphone or smartwatch to pay for goods and services in-store through digital wallets, up from 36 per cent in 2023.
Alex Cooney, chief executive of CyberSafeKids noted that the World Health Organisation (WHO) has not classed over-use of social media as an addiction which is in itself 'controversial' she believes.
'That's not to say we shouldn't be challenging this. (the use of the word addiction),' said Ms Cooney.
Advertisement
She believes that 'it's all about the money for social media companies that is created through the design and the harmful features attached.
That's what needs to be tackled, not telling people they are spending too much time on social media or by companies putting up messages or blocks on age groups. It's all about the metrics and algorithms.'
Ms Conney stressed that devices used by children and indeed adults interfere with work, sleep, exercise, education and socialisation. 'In extreme cases I have heard of people wearing nappies when they are gaming so they will not have to stop what they are doing and go to the bathroom.'
The Department of Health in response to the 'crisis' in phone over use, last September established an Online Health Taskforce (OHT), in recognition of the growing body of evidence, from Ireland and internationally, showing the links between certain types of online activity and physical and mental health harms to children and young people.
A Department of Health spokesperson said the taskforce is developing a 'strategic public health response to these harms and will bring forward evidence-informed interventions and recommendations.
'These recommendations may include, but are not limited to, legislation, regulation, national guidelines, education, awareness campaigns, as well as additional health and social care supports.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'Disgusting' loos see pupils trying to skip school - as horrified children say they feel 'like they were stepping into a horror movie'
'Disgusting' loos see pupils trying to skip school - as horrified children say they feel 'like they were stepping into a horror movie'

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

'Disgusting' loos see pupils trying to skip school - as horrified children say they feel 'like they were stepping into a horror movie'

More than one in ten parents said their children have asked to miss school because the toilets are so disgusting, a survey has suggested. A poll, of 2,000 parents of school-aged children in the UK suggests around one in six (17 per cent) parents rated the toilets at their child's school as unclean. Nearly a third (31 per cent) of families said they have raised concerns about the toilets with school staff, according to a survey for charity Parentkind. One parent told the charity that the toilets were so dirty that their children 'felt like they were stepping into a horror movie', while another parent said their child had seen cockroaches in the school toilets. The Censuswide poll suggests that 11 per cent of parents said their child had missed school, or asked to stay at home, because of worries about the toilets at school. The charity is calling on the Government to prioritise funds to improve 'disgusting' school toilets as part of plans to improve the school estate. It comes after the Chancellor announced around £2.3 billion per year for fixing 'crumbling classrooms' and £2.4 billion per year to rebuild 500 schools. Some surveyed parents suggested their children had wet themselves at school, or suffered constipation, because of avoiding the toilets at their school. Jason Elsom, chief executive of Parentkind, called for government funds set out in the spending review to be used to make school toilets 'fit for use'. He said: 'With a million children facing humiliation because of the disgusting state of school toilets, we need to shine a light on the health and well-being of our children who are refusing to drink during the day to avoid going to the toilet and the millions of children suffering constipation because their school toilets are so dirty. 'Parents tell us that we need to set aside the cash to clean and upgrade school loos. 'Parents tell us their children have seen 'cockroaches coming out of the floors' and toilets 'covered in poo and urine'.' Pepe Di'Iasio, general secretary of the Association of School and College Leaders, said: 'Schools understand the vital importance of toilets being clean and in good order, work hard to ensure this is the case, and will be dismayed at the findings of this research. 'Many schools are struggling with old and outdated buildings which require a great deal of maintenance because of years of government underfunding, and this may play a role in the perceptions reflected by respondents. 'We urgently need improved investment in upgrading and modernising school buildings.'

Rishi Sunak calls for national prostate cancer screening
Rishi Sunak calls for national prostate cancer screening

Telegraph

time4 hours ago

  • Telegraph

Rishi Sunak calls for national prostate cancer screening

Prostate cancer screening must be rolled out nationally, Rishi Sunak has urged. In his first major intervention since standing down as prime minister, Mr Sunak calls for targeted screening, so those with higher risk of the disease such as those with a family history of it undergo checks. The UK National Screening Committee (UK NSC) is currently considering whether to roll out screening. Experts believe there is a growing case for targeted screening, meaning that PSA blood tests would be offered to those at heightened risk of the disease. Writing for The Telegraph, Mr Sunak urges the UK NSC to make the leap – and to do so 'without delay'. In the meantime, he urges all men to use Father's Day this Sunday as an opportunity to talk to their fathers about their health. The MP, who recently became an ambassador for charity Prostate Cancer Research, writes: 'On Father's Day, many of us will call our dads for a chat. We'll discuss many things: the news, sport, the family. But few of us will touch on our health. 'For we men aren't very good at addressing that: I am the son of a GP but even me and my dad don't talk enough about health. In fact he's had a test, but it took him a while to get round to it. It's not that the topic is taboo, more that it never seems quite the right moment to ask a delicate question. 'But talking about health with your dad, and particularly the misconceptions around prostate cancer, could save their life. It is one of the best things you could do this Father's Day, and a true act of love'. Although one in eight men will be diagnosed with prostate cancer in their lifetimes, polling has found only 7 per cent of men know that the disease is symptomless in its early stages. Mr Sunak warns too many men were leaving it 'dangerously late' to seek help, only coming forward when symptoms such as pain or blood in urine began to show. 'Ignorance is costing lives' He says: 'The cancer will almost certainly be advanced at this point, and treatment far less certain to succeed. This ignorance is costing lives. It is why we need a targeted national screening programme to make sure that the right men are being checked at the right time for the disease. If we can make this happen, we can save thousands of lives.' Mr Sunak adds that since becoming an ambassador for the charity: 'What has really struck me in this time is how alien it is for men to proactively ask to be checked for a disease. Our assumption is that if everything is working fine, it is fine. 'When I raise prostate cancer and the need to get checked, men regularly tell me that everything is functioning down there, so they don't need a test. But that is not right: and this confusion is costing lives.' The UK NSC is expected to make a decision by the end of this year. Its members are considering different models, with discussions about the definition of close relatives if a family history becomes part of the criteria for targeted screening. As well as family history, risk factors also include ethnic group – with one in four black men diagnosed with the disease. Many experts in prostate cancer are calling for the 'dangerous' guidelines to be changed, so that younger men with a family history of prostate cancer such as Sir Chris Hoy can be tested for the disease. The 49-year-old, who is a six-time Olympic cycling gold medallist, was told he has two to four years to live after being diagnosed with terminal cancer that originated in his prostate. Despite a family history of prostate cancer – which affected both his father and grandfather – he was never offered PSA tests. In the UK prostate cancer is the most common cancer in men, with over 55,000 new cases diagnosed annually. Cases have risen by one quarter in the last five years. Despite improvements in survival, over 12,000 men die from prostate cancer each year. If prostate cancer is caught early, the chances of successful treatment are far higher. If it is detected after the disease has spread, the success rate of treatment is below 50 per cent. Mr Sunak salutes the work of men who have spoken out about the need to get checked, saying his friend Joe Biden's diagnosis would also raise awareness. Oliver Kemp, chief executive of Prostate Cancer Research, said the rollout of targeted screening would prevent 300 men a year from developing incurable disease. He said: 'Every 40 minutes in the UK, a family loses a father, a grandfather, or a son to prostate cancer. This is a tragedy compounded by a postcode lottery that means a man's chances of survival can depend on where he lives. 'The current passive system, where men must know their own risk and ask for a test, is failing us and worsening health inequality across the UK. That is why Prostate Cancer Research is calling for the urgent introduction of a targeted national screening programme for men at the highest risk, including black men and those with a family history of the disease'.

Your walking distance may be more important than speed to fix chronic back pain
Your walking distance may be more important than speed to fix chronic back pain

The Independent

time5 hours ago

  • The Independent

Your walking distance may be more important than speed to fix chronic back pain

While walking is beneficial for reducing the risk of lingering chronic low back pain, experts say that it is how you walk that really matters. Walking more is a bigger factor than how fast you walk, Norwegian researchers said on Friday. 'Our findings suggest that daily walking volume is more important than mean walking intensity in reducing the risk of chronic lower back pain,' they wrote in a study published in the journal JAMA Network Open. The authors also found that walking for more than 100 minutes a day -- or an hour and forty minutes -- was associated with a 23 percent lower risk of chronic low back pain compared with walking fewer than 78 minutes a day. Walking 125 minutes or more daily also lowered the risk by 24 percent. The study included data from more than 11,000 patients aged 20 years and older, who were a part of the Trøndelag Health Study. Their health was first assessed during the years from 2017 to 2019. The authors later followed up from 2021 to 2023. Participants did not have chronic low back pain at the start of the study. To measure their walking, they wore accelerometers. Following just over four years, 1,659 participants reported experiencing chronic low back pain. They noted that participants with a higher walking volume tended to exercise more often and that the reduction in risk of chronic low back pain leveled off beyond walking for 100 minutes a day. Still, they urged that these findings could inform policy related to the costly condition going forward. The findings come after previous research that also identified being active as a way to alleviate chronic low back pain. Back pain affects more than a quarter of Americans. Another study last year found that people with chronic low back pain who walked 30 minutes a day for five days a week went twice as long without a recurrence as those who did not walk, according to UCLA Health. Approximately 70 percent of individuals experience a recurrence of low back pain within 12 months following recovery from an episode, Australian researchers found. Walking can help to strengthen the muscles that support the spine, and increase circulation and joint mobilization, according to Healthline. It is the sixth-most costly condition in the U.S. and can be incredibly debilitating, making even standing up or sitting at work a struggle. 'If confirmed by future research, these results could inform public health strategies aimed at preventing chronic low back pain, as well as complementing current guidelines that solely report on physical activity as a secondary prevention tool,' they said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store