Monday, March 23, 2009

Heather Harmon Myspace Ca

Mobile, a new dependency

London (Corser)
Mobile: giovaniOtto alarm in ten are "employees"
An English study denouncing the excessive use by teenagers: six hours a day to the phone
(Emmevi photo) LONDON - It is Alarm phones in England after the publication of the study of "Health Protection Agency " on excessive use of mobile phones by teenagers across the Channel. According to data collected through a survey of the site search youngpoll.com on a sample of 2000 children aged 6 to 17 years in an English medium day a child sends 19 text messages, and it receives 15 calls 8, understood, in practice, attached to the phone for more than 6 hours, talking, texting or listening to music.
DEPENDENCE - why 8 out of 10 teenagers now consider "mobile-dependent 'means a condition confirmed by the fact that at least half of respondents admitted to sleeping with the phone next to the bed and three-quarters of them said to control missed calls or messages during the night as the first action of the day. And all this in spite of a recent Swedish study, led by Professor Lennart Hardell of Orebro University Hospital, which has demonstrated that excessive exposure to radiation from mobile devices fivefold the risk of brain cancer among those under 20. ADVERTISING
'Band - Not surprisingly, in France the ads calling on people under 12 years of using mobile phones were banned, while in England, this concern does not seem yet been implemented by the government and, consequently, English boys do not realize the danger of excessive use of cell phones, because for 81% of their mobile phone is the most important of all, and even on a three say they feel lost without, while 6 out of 10 say they can not do anything if they are stolen the precious object. Not only that. Numbers in hand, 9 out of 10 sixteen year olds have at least one and the same goes for more than 40% of pupils in primary school. And the phones often come out during lessons, as confirmed by the finding that one quarter of the students was caught texting at least once from the bench. "It is essential to discourage young people use mobile phones for six to seven hours a day as a preventative measure," he told 'Daily Express "a spokesman for the Health Protection Agency," while his colleague has Youngpoll.com pointed out that mobile phones represent now the fastest and easiest way to communicate with the kids. "Now with mobile devices are really the youngest of all. Just press a button and they can go online, play games or listen to music and making sure that the time passes quickly and is difficult to find the right balance. " Simona
Marchetti23 March 2009

0 comments:

Post a Comment