Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

Concerns Raised As Report Suggests Canadians Spending More Time Online

The Canadian Press, 21 Mar, 2017 12:41 PM
    HALIFAX — A new report says Canadians are spending more time surfing the web than ever before, raising concerns about how technology distracts from real-world relationships.
     
    The report from Media Technology Monitor says on average, anglophone Canadians who were surveyed spent 24.5 hours online per week in 2016, up about two hours from the previous year.
     
    But it says younger Canadians, age 18 to 34, spent even more time on the Internet — an average of 34 hours per week in 2016, or nearly five hours per day.
     
    Psychologist David Mensink says the figures concern him because the more time people spend online, the less time they're devoting to cultivating deeper real-life relationships.
     
    Mensink, who works in student affairs at Dalhousie University in Halifax, says even if we're communicating with others while online, we still need to make time for real contact because it is the essence of being human.
     
    He says Canadians should moderate their Internet usage and make dedicated times for face-to-face interactions with their loved ones.
     
    The report is based on telephone interviews conducted with 4,157 anglophone Canadians from all regions between Oct. 7 and Dec. 12, and the results are accurate within plus or minus 1.5 percentage points 19 times out of 20.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Vancouver Sees 174 Overdose Calls In One Week, Highest So Far In 2017

    Vancouver Sees 174 Overdose Calls In One Week, Highest So Far In 2017
    The city says in a release that the number of overdose calls Vancouver Fire and Rescue Services received between Feb. 26 to March 5 was the highest so far this year, and much higher than historical data.

    Vancouver Sees 174 Overdose Calls In One Week, Highest So Far In 2017

    British Columbia Premier Christy Clark Denounces Anti-Semitic Threats

    British Columbia Premier Christy Clark Denounces Anti-Semitic Threats
    Clark has issued a statement after the Jewish Community Centre of Greater Vancouver was evacuated Tuesday night after receiving a bomb threat.

    British Columbia Premier Christy Clark Denounces Anti-Semitic Threats

    B.C. Spends $91 Million To Hire Paramedics, Buy Ambulances, Targets Rural Care

    B.C. Spends $91 Million To Hire Paramedics, Buy Ambulances, Targets Rural Care
    VICTORIA — British Columbia is getting more paramedics, dispatchers and ambulances in an effort by the government to improve emergency services.

    B.C. Spends $91 Million To Hire Paramedics, Buy Ambulances, Targets Rural Care

    Water Restrictions In Kamloops, B.C., As Water Treatment Plant Shuts Down

    Water Restrictions In Kamloops, B.C., As Water Treatment Plant Shuts Down
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A power outage has knocked out the water treatment plant in Kamloops, B.C.

    Water Restrictions In Kamloops, B.C., As Water Treatment Plant Shuts Down

    B.C. Man Given One-year Probation For Having Sex In Stranger's Hot Tub

    B.C. Man Given One-year Probation For Having Sex In Stranger's Hot Tub
      Noah McDonald, who is 18, pleaded guilty in court in Kelowna, B.C., to mischief and trespassing.

    B.C. Man Given One-year Probation For Having Sex In Stranger's Hot Tub

    Vancouver School Board Releases Redacted Report On Bullying, Toxic Workplace

    Vancouver School Board Releases Redacted Report On Bullying, Toxic Workplace
    A redacted report released by the Vancouver School Board singles out members of the left-leaning Vision Vancouver party in an external investigation that blames trustees for creating a toxic work environment in which staff were bullied and harassed.

    Vancouver School Board Releases Redacted Report On Bullying, Toxic Workplace