Smartphone screen time reduction improves mental health: a randomized controlled trial.

IF 8.3 1区 医学 Q1 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL BMC Medicine Pub Date : 2025-02-21 DOI:10.1186/s12916-025-03944-z
Christoph Pieh, Elke Humer, Andreas Hoenigl, Julia Schwab, Doris Mayerhofer, Rachel Dale, Katja Haider
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Abstract

Background: Smartphone screen time has risen sharply in recent years. Even though an association between smartphone use and mental health is well documented, it is still unclear whether this is simply a correlation or causality. The aim of this study is to investigate the effects of smartphone screen time reduction on mental health indicators.

Methods: This non-blinded, parallel randomized controlled trial (RCT) was performed to investigate the impact of a 3-week screen time reduction to ≤ 2 h/d in healthy students on stress (PSQ), well-being (WHO-5), depressive symptoms (PHQ-9), and sleep quality (ISI) at baseline (t0), post-intervention (t1), and at follow-up (t2 = 6 weeks after t1). For the intention to treat analysis, repeated measures ANOVAs and post-hoc tests (for time as well as group differences) were performed and effect sizes were presented as partial eta squared (η2 = time × group) and group-mean differences.

Results: In total, 111 out of 125 healthy students (70 females; mean age = 22.68 ± 2.6 years; mean screen time = 276 ± 115.1 min/day) were randomly assigned to intervention-(n = 58; 3 weeks of screen time reduction to ≤ 2 h/day) or control group (n = 53). Although no differences were observed at baseline (t0), significant post-intervention (t1) effects of small to medium size were observed on well-being (η2 = .053), depressive symptoms (η2 = .109), sleep quality (η2 = .048), and stress (η2 = .085). Significant group differences (p ≤ .05) were found post-intervention (t1) for depressive symptoms (Mean Difference (MD) = 2.11, Standard Error (SE) = 0.63, 95% Confidence Interval (CI) [0.87, 3.36]), sleep quality (MD = 2.59, SE = 0.97, 95% CI [0.66, 4.51]), well-being (MD = -1.54, SE = 0.68, 95% CI [.-2.89, -0.18]), and stress (MD = 6.91, SE = 3.48, 95% CI [0.01, 13.81]). Screen time increased rapidly after the intervention and at follow-up the values were once again approaching the initial level.

Conclusions: The study highlights mental health improvements through smartphone screen time reduction. Three weeks of screen time reduction showed small to medium effect sizes on depressive symptoms, stress, sleep quality, and well-being. The results suggest a causal relationship, rather than a merely correlative one, between daily smartphone screen time and mental health.

Trial registration: The study was preregistered on Open Science Framework (trial registration number: A9K76) on November 8, 2023.

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减少智能手机屏幕时间可改善心理健康:一项随机对照试验。
背景:近年来,智能手机屏幕使用时间急剧增加。尽管智能手机的使用与心理健康之间的联系有充分的文献记载,但目前还不清楚这是一种简单的相关性还是因果关系。这项研究的目的是调查智能手机屏幕时间减少对心理健康指标的影响。方法:本研究采用非盲、平行随机对照试验(RCT),研究健康学生将屏幕时间减少3周至≤2小时/天对基线(t0)、干预后(t1)和随访(t2 = t1后6周)的压力(PSQ)、幸福感(WHO-5)、抑郁症状(PHQ-9)和睡眠质量(ISI)的影响。为了处理分析的意图,进行了重复测量ANOVAs和事后检验(时间和组差异),效应大小表示为偏eta平方(η2 =时间×组)和组平均差异。结果:125名健康学生中,111人(女70人;平均年龄22.68±2.6岁;平均屏幕时间= 276±115.1分钟/天)被随机分配到干预组(n = 58;3周屏幕时间减少到≤2小时/天)或对照组(n = 53)。虽然在基线(t0)时没有观察到差异,但在幸福感(η2 = 0.053)、抑郁症状(η2 = 0.109)、睡眠质量(η2 = 0.048)和压力(η2 = 0.085)方面观察到显著的干预后(t1)效应。干预后(t1)在抑郁症状(平均差异(MD) = 2.11,标准误差(SE) = 0.63, 95%可信区间(CI)[0.87, 3.36])、睡眠质量(MD = 2.59, SE = 0.97, 95% CI[0.66, 4.51])、幸福感(MD = -1.54, SE = 0.68, 95% CI[.-2.89, -0.18])和压力(MD = 6.91, SE = 3.48, 95% CI[0.01, 13.81])方面存在显著组间差异(p≤0.05)。干预后,屏幕时间迅速增加,随访时,这些数值再次接近初始水平。结论:该研究强调了通过减少智能手机屏幕时间来改善心理健康。减少三周的屏幕时间对抑郁症状、压力、睡眠质量和幸福感有小到中等的影响。结果表明,每天看智能手机的时间与心理健康之间存在因果关系,而不仅仅是相关关系。试验注册:该研究已于2023年11月8日在开放科学框架上预注册(试验注册号:A9K76)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
BMC Medicine
BMC Medicine 医学-医学:内科
CiteScore
13.10
自引率
1.10%
发文量
435
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: BMC Medicine is an open access, transparent peer-reviewed general medical journal. It is the flagship journal of the BMC series and publishes outstanding and influential research in various areas including clinical practice, translational medicine, medical and health advances, public health, global health, policy, and general topics of interest to the biomedical and sociomedical professional communities. In addition to research articles, the journal also publishes stimulating debates, reviews, unique forum articles, and concise tutorials. All articles published in BMC Medicine are included in various databases such as Biological Abstracts, BIOSIS, CAS, Citebase, Current contents, DOAJ, Embase, MEDLINE, PubMed, Science Citation Index Expanded, OAIster, SCImago, Scopus, SOCOLAR, and Zetoc.
期刊最新文献
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