Video Games & TV Cause Depression

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Shenzie
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01 Mar 2009, 9:04 pm

I dont know what to think of this but here it it From YAHOO NEWS

WASHINGTON (AFP) – Spending more hours watching television or playing video games as a teenager may lead to depression in young adults, according to a study published Monday.

Researchers looked at the exposure to electronic media of 4,142 adolescents who were not depressed when the study began in 1995, before DVDs and the Internet were widely used.

The teens reported an average of 5.68 hours of media exposure per day, including 2.3 hours of television, 2.34 hours of radio, 0.62 hours of videocassettes and 0.41 hours of computer games.

Seven years later, when the participants were an average of 21.8 years old, 308 of them (7.4 percent) had developed symptoms consistent with depression.

"In the fully adjusted models, participants had significantly greater odds of developing depression by follow-up for each hour of daily television viewed," wrote the authors of the study published in the Archives of General Psychiatry journal.

"In addition, those reporting higher total media exposure had significantly greater odds of developing depression for each additional hour of daily use," said the study, led by Brian Primack of the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine.

Young women were found to be less likely to develop symptoms of depression than young men when exposed to the same amount of electronic media.

Depression, the leading cause of non-fatal disability worldwide, commonly begins in adolescence or young adulthood, the article explained.

The authors noted that time spent engaging with electronic media may replace time that could be spent on social, athletic or intellectual activities that could guard against depression.

Messages transmitted through electronic media may encourage aggression, inspire fear or anxiety and hamper identity development, they added.

Being exposed to media at night may also disrupt sleep important for emotional and cognitive development.

"When high amounts of television or total exposure are present, a broader assessment of the adolescent's psychosocial functioning may be appropriate, including screening for current depressive symptoms and for the presence of additional risk factors," the authors said.

"If no other immediate intervention is indicated, encouraging patients to participate in activities that promote a sense of mastery and social connection may promote the development of protective factors against depression."



BlackjackGabbiani
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01 Mar 2009, 9:12 pm

Electronic media isn't a social outlet now? Funny, it's my MAIN social outlet.

I find it quite telling that they didn't factor in subject matter of what was viewed or played, or mention if they watched/played WITH anyone.



Keith
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01 Mar 2009, 10:03 pm

I don't believe this crap. I'd had my faithful friends for a while now. TV and a computer. About equal time shared amongst both. Sometimes insane hours on my computer. I laugh in the face of this survey :lol:



Cyberman
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01 Mar 2009, 10:36 pm

Without video games and Doctor Who, this planet would be even more depressing than it is now...



Shenzie
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02 Mar 2009, 1:32 am

It bs how people think this crap up



DeaconBlues
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02 Mar 2009, 1:42 am

Using a similar logic, one can follow the lives of those who drank beer before the age of 15, find a certain percentage (almost certainly higher than 7.4%) develop drug habits later, and conclude that drinking beer leads to drug abuse. It fails to take into account that the two factors may share a causative effect (in the beer instance, both the beer-drinking and the drug abuse may stem from a desire to escape reality; in the quoted study, the use of TV and video games may have been to self-treat the effects of nascent depression).

Until a fuller understanding of biochemistry can be achieved, such a study cannot be controlled with proper scientific rigor. Which is one of the reasons that I hold that psychology is one of the "fuzzy sciences", like sociology or pharmacology.


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