Internet and facebook addiction among Egyptian and Malaysian medical students: a comparative study, Tanta University, Egypt

Authors

  • Shimaa M. Saied Department of Public Health and Community Medicine, Tanta University
  • Hala M. Elsabagh Department of Public Health and Community Medicine, Tanta University
  • Aliaa M. El-Afandy Department of Community Health nursing, Helwan University, Cairo

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18203/2394-6040.ijcmph20161400

Keywords:

Internet addiction, Facebook, Medical students, Tanta, Egypt

Abstract

Background: Internet addiction and problematic internet use (PIU) constitutes a problem among university students worldwide. Little is known about the adverse effects and unhealthy behaviors among medical students using internet and facebook. The objective of this study was to determine prevalence, associated factors and effects of Internet and Facebook addiction on medical students of Tanta faculty of medicine.

Methods:Cross sectional study was conducted in Tanta faculty of medicine, Tanta University, Egypt on 861 Egyptian and Malaysian students at 4th and 5th medical year from March to May, 2015 in the academic year 2014-2015. A self-administered questionnaire was used. It included questions on socio-demographic and academic data, patterns of internet use, patterns facebook use, and young internet addiction test (YIAT).

Results: The majority of the students of both Egyptian and Malaysian students reported that they have home internet access (85.8% and 89.2%) mostly via mobile phones (92.4%). Facebook the most frequently used social media by Egyptian students (93%), while other social media such as twitter, whatsapp, skype were more frequently used by Malaysian ones (96.4%). Habitual use of facebook late night was reported by 26.9% of Egyptian students compared to only 15.5% of Malaysian ones with statistically significant difference. The most commonly reported adverse effects were: eye irritation, followed by headache, then back pain. Only minor percentage of the students (2.7%) had significant problems in life due to internet use, while the largest percent of them (64.1%) were average internet users. Significantly higher percent of Egyptian students had (PIU) than Malaysian ones (3.8%, 0.9% respectively). Significant negative correlation was found between IAT scores and academic grades of the students.

Conclusions:Facebook and internet use affects the social life of medical students. Excessive facebook and internet use is associated with adverse health effects and unhealthy behaviours. Medical students are at increased risk for problematic internet use, and to a lesser extent internet addiction which negatively affects their academic grades.

References

Christakis D. Internet addiction: A 21st century epidemic? BioMed Central Medicine. 2010;8:61.

Number of internet users worldwide from 2005 to 2015, in millions. Available at http://www.statista.com/statistics/273018/number-of-internet-users-worldwide. Accessed 14 December 2015.

Internet world status. Egypt internet usage and telecommunications report, 2012. Available at http://www.internetworldstats.com/af/eg.htm. Accessed 2012.

The global information technology report 2008-2009: mobility in the networked world, 2009. Available at http://www.weforum.org/pdf/gitr/2009/gitr09fullreport.pdf. Accessed 2009.

United Nations development programme (UNDP) and institute of national planning (INP). Egypt human development report 2010: Youth in Egypt: Building our Future. Available at http://www.undp.org.eg/Portals/english.pdf. Accessed 2010.

Kormas G, Critselis E, Janikian M, Kafetzis D, Tsitsika A. Risk factors and psychosocial characteristics of potential problematic and problematic internet use among adolescents: a cross-sectional study, BioMed Central Public Health. 2011;11:595.

Chatterjee I, Sinha B. Relationship between compulsive use of internet and some personality characteristics of college students. Quest international multidisciplinary research Journal, 2012;1(2):146-50.

Goel D, Subramanyam A, Kamath R. A study on the prevalence of internet addiction and its association with psychopathology in Indian adolescents. Indian J Psychiatry. 2013;55(2):140-3.

Salehi M, Khalili MN, Hojjat SK, Salehi M, Danesh A. Prevalence of internet addiction and associated factors among medical students from Mashhad, Iran in 2013. Iran Red Crescent Med J. 2014;16(5):e17256.

Facebook, from wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Available at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Facebook. Accessed 2016.

Debatin B, Lovejoy JP, Horn AK, Hughes BN. Facebook and online privacy: attitudes, behaviors, and unintended consequences. J Comput. 2009;15(1):83-108.

Number of monthly active Facebook users worldwide as of 1st quarter 2016 in millions. http://www.statista.com/statistics/264810/number-of-monthly-active-facebook-users-worldwide/. Accessed 15 December 2015.

Lewis J, West A. Friending: London-based undergraduates experience of facebook. New media and society. 2009;11(7):1209-29.

Farooqi H, Patel H, Aslam H, Ansari I, Khan M, Iqbal N, et al. Effect of Facebook on the life of Medical University students. International Archives of Medicine. International Archives of Medicine. 2013;6:40.

Young KS. Internet addiction: The emergence of a new clinical disorder. Cyber Psychology and Behavior. 1998;1(3):237-44.

Yellowlees P, Marks S. Problematic internet use or internet addiction? Comput Human Behav. 2007;23:1447-53.

Reda M, Rabie M, Mohsen N, Hassan A. Problematic internet users and psychiatric morbidity in a sample of Egyptian adolescents. Psychology. 2012;3(8):626-31.

Lusk B. Digital natives and social media behaviors: an overview. Prevention Researcher. 2010;173-6.

Tayeeh SA. Using the internet in the Arab world: a field study on a sample of Arab youth. Egyptian Journal of Public Opinion Research. 2002;4.

Qingya W, Wei C, Yu L. The effects of social media on college students. MBA student scholarship 5. Available at http://scholarsarchive.jwu.edu/mba_student/5. Accessed 19 December 2011.

Ellison NB, Steinfield C, Lampe C. The benefits of Facebook friends: social capital and college students use of online social network sites. J Comput. 2007;12(4):1143-68.

Coniglio M, Muni V, Giammanco G, Pignato S. Excessive internet use and internet addiction: emerging public health issues. Ig Sanita Pubbl. 2007;63(2):127.

Brian D. Addiction to the Internet and online gaming. Cyber Psychology and Behavior. 2005;8(2):110-3.

Wang H, Zhou X, Lu C, Wu J, Hong L, Deng X. Problematic internet use in high school students in guangdong province, China. PLoS One. 2011;6:e19660.

Kamal NN, Mosallem FA. Determinants of problematic internet use among el-minia high school students, Egypt. Int. J. Prev. Med. 2013;4(12):1429-37.

Coniglio M, Muni V, Giammanco G, Pignato S. Excessive Internet use and Internet addiction: emerging public health issues. Ig Sanita Pubbl. 2007;63(2):127.

Suhail K, Bargees Z. Effects of excessive internet use on undergraduate students in Pakistan. Cyber psychol Behav. 2006;9(3):297-307.

Ghassemzadeh L, Shahraray M, Moradi A. Prevalence of Internet addiction and comparison of Internet addicts and non-addicts in Iranian high schools. Cyber Psychology and Behavior. 2008;11:731-3.

Canbaz S, Sunter AT, Peksen Y, Canbaz MA. Prevalence of the pathological Internet use in a sample of Turkish school adolescents. Iranian Journal of Public Health. 2009;38:64-71.

Canan F, Ataoglu A, Nichols LA, Yildirim T, Ozturk O. Evaluation of psychometric properties of the internet addiction scale in a sample of turkish high school students. Cyber psychology, Behavior, and Social Networking. 2010;13:317-20.

Desouky DA, Ibrahem RA. Internet addiction and psychological morbidity among menoufia university students, Egypt. American Journal of Public Health Research. 2015;3(5):192-8.

Al Saif AA. Risks associated with the use of the internet and its impact upon 37 students' awareness of perverse issues: literature review. Acta Didactica Napocensia. 2009;2(4):33-8.

Kyunghee K, Ryu E, Chon MY, Yeune J, Choi SY Seo JS, et al. Internet addiction in Korean adolescents and its relation to depression and suicidal ideation: a questionnaire survey. International Journal of Nursing Studies. 2006;43(2):185-92.

Downloads

Published

2017-02-03

How to Cite

Saied, S. M., Elsabagh, H. M., & El-Afandy, A. M. (2017). Internet and facebook addiction among Egyptian and Malaysian medical students: a comparative study, Tanta University, Egypt. International Journal Of Community Medicine And Public Health, 3(5), 1288–1297. https://doi.org/10.18203/2394-6040.ijcmph20161400

Issue

Section

Original Research Articles