Meet the Real Screen Addicts: the Elderly (economist.com)
(Tuesday November 04, 2025 @11:54AM (msmash)
from the closer-look dept.)
- Reference: 0179963760
- News link: https://tech.slashdot.org/story/25/11/04/1654219/meet-the-real-screen-addicts-the-elderly
- Source link: https://www.economist.com/international/2025/10/23/meet-the-real-screen-addicts-the-elderly
Britain's National Centre for Gaming Disorders has treated 67 people over the age of 40 since opening in 2019. The oldest patient was a 72-year-old woman with a smartphone gaming obsession. Britons over 65 spent more than three hours a day online on smartphones, computers and tablets last year, according to Ofcom. They spent more than five and a half hours watching broadcast television. Over-65s are more likely than under-25s to own tablets, smart televisions, e-readers, and desktop and laptop computers, a seven-country survey by GWI found. Nearly a fifth of 55- to 64-year-olds own a games console.
Ipsit Vahia, who heads the Technology and Ageing Laboratory at McLean Hospital, part of Harvard Medical School, said some older adults are [1]increasingly living their lives through their phones the way teenagers or adolescents sometimes do. A 2022 study in South Korea estimated that 15% of those aged 60-69 were at risk of phone addiction. A meta-analysis published in April of studies on more than 400,000 older adults found that over-50s who regularly used digital devices had lower rates of cognitive decline than those who did not.
[1] https://www.economist.com/international/2025/10/23/meet-the-real-screen-addicts-the-elderly
Ipsit Vahia, who heads the Technology and Ageing Laboratory at McLean Hospital, part of Harvard Medical School, said some older adults are [1]increasingly living their lives through their phones the way teenagers or adolescents sometimes do. A 2022 study in South Korea estimated that 15% of those aged 60-69 were at risk of phone addiction. A meta-analysis published in April of studies on more than 400,000 older adults found that over-50s who regularly used digital devices had lower rates of cognitive decline than those who did not.
[1] https://www.economist.com/international/2025/10/23/meet-the-real-screen-addicts-the-elderly