Facebook can
make you mentally ill ?
Facebook may affect
your mental health by causing psychotic episodes and delusions, researchers
warn. (AP)
Facebook and other social networking
sites may affect your mental health by causing psychotic episodes and
delusions, researchers warn.
As Internet access becomes increasingly widespread,
so do related psychopathologies such as Internet addiction and delusions
related to the technology and to virtual relationships, according to the study.
Computer communications such as Facebook and chat groups
are an important part of this story, said Dr Uri Nitzan of Tel Aviv
University's Sackler Faculty of Medicine and the Shalvata Mental Health Care
Center.
According to Nitzan, patients shared some crucial
characteristics, including loneliness or vulnerability due to the loss of or
separation from a loved one, relative inexperience with technology, and no
prior history of psychosis or substance abuse.
In each case, a connection was found between the
gradual development and exacerbation of psychotic symptoms, including
delusions, anxiety, confusion, and intensified use of computer communications.
The good news is that all of the patients, who
willingly sought out treatment on their own, were able to make a full recovery
with proper treatment and care, Nitzan said.
While technologies such as Facebook have numerous
advantages, some patients are harmed by these social networking sites, which
can attract those who are lonely or vulnerable in their day-to-day lives or act
as a platform for cyber-bullying and other predatory behaviour, he said.
All three of Nitzan's patients sought refuge from a
lonely situation and found solace in intense virtual relationships. Although
these relationships were positive at first, they eventually led to feelings of
hurt, betrayal, and invasion of privacy, said Nitzan.
"All of the patients developed psychotic
symptoms related to the situation, including delusions regarding the person
behind the screen and their connection through the computer," he said.
Two patients began to feel vulnerable as a result
of sharing private information, and one even experienced tactile
hallucinations, believing that the person beyond the screen was physically
touching her.
Some of the problematic features of the Internet
relate to issues of geographical and spatial distortion, the absence of
non-verbal cues, and the tendency to idealise the person with whom someone is
communicating, becoming intimate without ever meeting face-to-face.
All of these factors can contribute to a patient's
break with reality, and the development of a psychotic state.
The study was published in the Israel Journal of
Psychiatry and Related Sciences.
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