Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
Life

Phone-In-Cheek: Spike Seen In Cellphone-Linked Face Injuries

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Dec, 2019 09:30 PM

    Add facial cuts, bruises and fractures to the risks from cellphones and carelessly using them.

     

    That's according to a study published Thursday that found a spike in U.S. emergency room treatment for these mostly minor injuries.

     

    The research was led by a facial plastic surgeon whose patients include a woman who broke her nose when she dropped her phone on her face. Dr. Boris Paskhover of Rutgers New Jersey Medical School said his experience treating patients with cellphone injuries prompted him to look into the problem.

     

    Paskhover and others analyzed 20 years of emergency room data and found an increase in cellphone injuries starting after 2006, around the time when the first smartphones were introduced.

     

    Some injuries were caused by phones themselves, including people getting hit by a thrown phone. But Paskhover said many were caused by distracted use including texting while walking, tripping and landing face-down on the sidewalk.

     

    Most patients in the study weren’t hospitalized, but the researchers said the problem should be taken seriously.

     

    The study involved cases in a U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission database that collects emergency room visit information from about 100 hospitals. The researchers tallied 2,500 patients with cellphone-related head and neck injuries from 1998 through 2017.

     

    The study was published in the journal JAMA Otolaryngology.

     

    Nationwide, they estimated there were about 76,000 people injured during that time. Annual cases totalled fewer than 2,000 until 2006, but increased steeply after that. About 40% of those injured were ages 13 to 29, and many were hurt while walking, texting or driving.

     

    Cellphone use also has been linked with repetitive strain injuries in the hands and neck, and injuries to other parts of the body caused by distracted use.

     

    “I love my smartphone,” Paskhover said, but he added that it’s easy to get too absorbed and avoiding injury requires common sense.

     

    “People wouldn’t walk around reading a magazine,” he said. “Be careful.”

     

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Celebrate Vaisakhi With Traditional Punjabi Dishes

    Celebrate Vaisakhi With Traditional Punjabi Dishes
    A list of some of the most iconic and delectable Punjabi foods that are a must-have during Vaisakhi.

    Celebrate Vaisakhi With Traditional Punjabi Dishes

    Reviving a Forgotten History

    Steven Purewal, author of Duty, Honour & Izzat, has taken it into his hands to stir change when it comes to recognizing the role of Punjabi solders in pivotal global events 

    Reviving a Forgotten History

    The Revival: Sikh Heritage Month BC

    The Revival focused on how local Sikh-Canadian artists explore and reflect on their identities and seeks to bridge the gap between diasporic audiences and the classical Sikh arts. 

    The Revival: Sikh Heritage Month BC

    Who Does the Khalsa Serve?

    After a gap of 72 years, Kartarpur and Dera Baba Nanak appear to be within sight of each other. Decades of ardas by the sangat seem to have been finally answered.

    Who Does the Khalsa Serve?

    Celebrate Punjabi language this Vaisakhi

    Punjabis are now well-established in more than 170 countries around the globe. Wherever they have settled, they have taken their language Punjabi with them.

    Celebrate Punjabi language this Vaisakhi

    Impact of sexual assault on students’ mental health

    Being one of the dominant social problems amongst the young generation and post-secondary students, sexual assault often resulted in physical violence and threat

    Impact of sexual assault on students’ mental health