Cyberaddiction in the medical setting: A study of 45 cases
A. Ghenim, D. Brahim, I. Yaich, C. Ben Said, A. Belkahla, I. Youssef, M. Mersni, N. Mechergui, H. Ben Said, G. Bahri, M. Bani, N. Bram, N. Ladhari

TL;DR
This study found that 24% of young doctors show signs of cyberaddiction, which is linked to anxiety and depression.
Contribution
The study identifies cyberaddiction prevalence and its association with mental health in young medical professionals.
Findings
24% of the surveyed physicians showed signs of cyberaddiction.
Cyberaddiction was significantly associated with female gender and anxiety symptoms.
13.3% of participants had depressive symptoms.
Abstract
Internet use can become uncontrollable, leading to physical and psychological suffering and what is known as cyberaddiction. To assess the frequency of cyberaddiction in a population of young doctors. We conducted a cross-sectional, descriptive study of a population of young doctors. We collected socio-professional and medical data using a Google Forms self-questionnaire. The Young scale was recommended for screening for cyberaddiction. A score ≥5 indicates Internet addiction. The Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HAD) was adopted to reveal anxiety-depressive disorders. A total of 45 physicians responded to our survey. The mean age was 29.93±4.8 years. The sex ratio (M/F) was 0.3. Participants were single in 69% of cases. Residents represented 64% of the population. Physicians were family medicine residents in 11% of cases. The mean Young’s score was 3.13±1.97/8. Cyberaddiction…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDigital Mental Health Interventions
