Internet Addiction. Juan Moisés De La Serna
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Internet Addiction
When addiction is consumed through the Internet
By
Juan Moisés de la Serna
Translated by Garcia Menendez Maria Gloria
Copyright © 2018
www.juanmoisesdelaserna.es
Preamble
Technology is more and more present in our lives, which is a clear advance, but also a danger, especially among the youngest people, since they can fall into what is called Internet Addiction.
This has become a reality today, a health problem that did not exist only a decade ago, and which is taking on new victims and more and more young people every day.
Although the long-term consequences are still unknown, the fact that some studies indicate that 30% of young people who use the Internet on a daily basis are at risk of developing a behavioural addiction means that one in three of them is at risk of developing a behavioural addiction.
While some countries are beginning to take steps to prevent it, in others they have not yet realized the gravity of the situation, hence the need to disseminate the results of the latest research in this area to give visibility to a social problem that requires both preventive and curative measures.
Ãndice
Chapter 1. Definition of Internet Addiction 7
Chapter 2. Symptomatology of Internet Addiction 17
Chapter 3. Diagnosis of Internet Addiction 30
Chapter 4. Types de Internet Addiction 45
Chapter 5. Treatment of Internet Addiction 48
About Juan Moisés de la Serna 53
Dedicated to my parents
THANKS
I would like to take this opportunity to thank all the people who have contributed to this text, especially Mr. Cam Adair, co-author of the Manual on Addiction of Video Games for Parents.
âInternet Addiction: When addiction is consumed through the Internetâ
Written By Juan Moises de la Serna
Copyright © 2018 Juan Moises de la Serna
All rights reserved
Distributed by TeakTime.
https://www.traduzionelibri.it
Translated by Garcia Menendez Maria Gloria
Chapter 1. Definition of Internet Addiction
The extensive and intensive use of new technologies, especially among young people, has brought about a new reality, that of Internet addiction.
Although this phenomenon has been reported for some years now, Internet addiction has become a âcommonâ mental health problem.
Addictions, especially behavioural ones, do not seem to distinguish between gender or age, and can occur at any time in life, although it is during adolescence that some of them seem to become more evident.
Perhaps because there is a certain level of social permissiveness in young people to explore new behaviours, including risky ones, which are not allowed at any other age.
Some defend this position by indicating that it is a way of discovering the world, but above all oneself, with its possibilities and limitations.
Just like experiencing healthy behaviours, it is also when the first addictive practices appear, either substance or behavioural, such as Internet addiction.
But if there is a particularly sensitive group among young people who are particularly sensitive to Internet addiction, it is university students, on whom a great deal of research is being carried out, although it is not clear whether it is because Internet Addiction has a greater impact on them, or because it is a particularly accessible group for research, in what some have called campus research, but what health problems does the Internet entail?
This is precisely what is being investigated through research conducted jointly by the Department of Community Medicine, HiTech School of Medicine and the Department of Statistics, Utkal University (India), the results of which have been published in the International Journal of Advanced Multidisciplinary Research.
The study included 100 randomly selected students between the ages of 17 and 23, 95% of whom were women.
All of them were given a test to assess their level of Internet addiction through the I.A.T. (Internet Addiction Test) and another to evaluate the implications in the studentâs emotional world through the P.A.N.A.S. (Positive and Negative Affect Schedule).
Data was also collected on the time they spend on the Internet, the purpose of their use, the places they visit and the number of hours they spend surfing the Internet.
The results show that 74% of Internet use is for personal purposes, while only 26% is for subjects related to their studies.
With 76% of students aged between 2 and 4 years as users of the network, 93% showing non-intensive use of the networks, less than two hours a day.
With respect to the places they visit, 23% do so on social networks, while the remaining 76% use it to explore the Internet in search of information related to their studies.
Although this is a broad sample, it focuses exclusively on one type of technology career, so the results cannot be extended to other students in less technology-related careers.
Likewise, and despite reporting that both men and women were included in the groups of participants, the data are not analyzed separately, so with this study it is not possible to know the incidence of Internet addiction in relation to gender.
Despite having been evaluated, the results do not indicate the degree of students who are addicted to the Internet, nor do they explain the significant positive effects on mood that have been found in the use of the Internet.
But