Connecting
with other teens online may be fun. But spending too much time on the Internet
could lead to health problems, a new study reports. Heavy Internet use appears
able to put teens at serious risk of high blood pressure, it finds.
As the term suggests, high blood
pressure exerts extra outward pressure on vessel walls. With exercise, blood
pressure increases. At rest, that pressure should return to a relatively low,
background level. But in some people, it remains relatively elevated, even at
rest.
High blood pressure in children
and teens often continues into adulthood, says Andrea Cassidy-Bushrow, who led
the new study. That’s a problem, she says. Persistent high blood pressure can
trigger serious health problems, from kidney disease and memory loss to eye
damage and heart disease or stroke.
Cassidy-Bushrow works at the
Henry Ford Health System in Detroit, Mich. As an epidemiologist, she
investigates causes of illness.
Obesity
and diets high in salt are among factors known to boost blood pressure. But
researchers worry that other, less obvious, factors also may play a role.
Previous studies had linked screen time — watching television or playing on a
computer — and high blood pressure. One possible reason: Teens on screens get
less exercise, Cassidy-Bushrow says. But Internet use also has been linked to
depression and obesity. And that’s for Internet use, specifically, not just
screen time as a whole, she points out.
What might make Internet use
more dangerous? It isn’t passive, like watching TV, Cassidy-Bushrow explains.
There’s also the growing risk of cyberbullying, which can make it more
stressful than other types of screen time.
What’s more, Internet
connections are available in 98 percent of U.S. public schools. With cell
phones and other mobile devices, the Internet can be as close as the touch of a
button for most tweens and teens. And it’s available around the clock. Frequent
Internet use has been linked to anxiety, addiction and
social isolation. All of these are associated with high blood pressure in
adults.
So the researchers recruited 331
adolescents, aged 14 to 17, to study whether Internet use might influence blood
pressure in teens.
In the lab, the scientists
measured each teen’s blood pressure, height and weight. They used some of these
data to calculate each teen’s body
mass index, or BMI. BMI is one way to look at whether somebody is
over- or underweight. The teens also answered questions about how much time
they spend on the Internet. This included both the number of hours per day as
well as the number of days per week.
Nearly all of the teens had used
the Internet during the week before their lab visit. Most reported accessing
the Internet both at home and at school. Most also reported moderate to heavy
Internet use. The researchers defined heavy use as two or more hours each and
every day. Moderate use involved less than two hours a day on five to seven
days a week. Light users accessed the internet for less than two hours a day
and on no more than four days a week.
Four out of 10 teens used the
Internet more than two hours every day. Nineteen percent of these heavy users
had high blood pressure. That’s compared to just seven percent of light users.
Another four in ten teens reported moderate use. These teens had moderately
high blood pressure.
The findings appear in the
October 2015 Journal of
School Nursing.
"It's an interesting
study," says Ellen Wartella. She is a psychologist at Northwestern
University in Evanston, Ill. But, she points out, the study has a major limitation:
The researchers measured blood pressure only once for each teen. However, she
notes, “We know it varies considerably.” So a single data point for each person
may not accurately reflect a teen’s average daily blood pressure.
Cassidy-Bushrow agrees that more
research needs to be done. However, she adds, single blood-pressure readings
have been used in other studies. For now, she recommends that school nurses
screen students for high blood pressure and moderate to heavy Internet use.
Education and training for
teens, teachers and parents also could help ensure that teens find a healthy
balance in their online life, she says. That could go a long way in helping
protect the health of people growing up in this digital age.
cr: https://www.sciencenewsforstudents.org/article/internet-use-may-harm-teen-health
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