Pearson Amber L, Mack Elizabeth, Namanya Judith
Department of Geography, Environment & Spatial Sciences, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan, United States of America; and Department of Public Health, University of Otago, Wellington, New Zealand.
Department of Geography, Environment & Spatial Sciences, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2017 Jan 17;12(1):e0169819. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0169819. eCollection 2017.
Due to the ubiquity of mobile phones around the globe, studies are beginning to analyze their influence on health. Prior work from developed countries highlights negative mental health outcomes related to overuse of mobile phones. However, there is little work on mental health impacts of mobile phone use or ownership in developing countries. This is an important gap to address because there are likely variations in mental health impacts of mobile phones between developing and developed countries, due to cultural nuances to phone use and distinct variations in financial models for obtaining mobile phone access in developing countries. To address this gap, this study analyzes survey data from 92 households in sparse, rural villages in Uganda to test two hypotheses about mobile phone ownership and mental health in a developing country context: (i) Mobile phone ownership is higher among more privileged groups, compared to less privileged groups (ie, wealth and ethnicity); and (ii) mobile phone ownership is positively associated with a culturally-relevant indicator of mental health, 'feelings of peace'. Results indicate that households with mobile phones had higher levels of wealth on average, yet no significant differences were detected by ethnicity. As hypothesized, mobile phone ownership was associated with increased mental well-being for persons without family nearby (in the District) (p = 0.038) after adjusting for wealth, ethnicity and amount of land for crops and land for grazing. Mobile phone ownership was not significantly associated with increased mental well-being for persons with family nearby. These findings are consistent with studies of mobile phone use in other sub-Saharan African countries which find that phones are important tools for social connection and are thus beneficial for maintaining family ties. One might infer then that this increased feeling of mental well-being for persons located farther from family stems from the ability to maintain family connections. These findings are quite different from work in developed countries where mobile phone use is a source of technology-related stress or technostress.
由于手机在全球范围内无处不在,相关研究开始分析其对健康的影响。发达国家先前的研究强调了与过度使用手机相关的负面心理健康结果。然而,关于发展中国家手机使用或拥有对心理健康影响的研究却很少。这是一个需要填补的重要空白,因为由于手机使用的文化细微差别以及发展中国家获取手机的财务模式存在明显差异,发展中国家和发达国家在手机对心理健康的影响方面可能存在差异。为了填补这一空白,本研究分析了乌干达偏远乡村92个家庭的调查数据,以检验在发展中国家背景下关于手机拥有与心理健康的两个假设:(i)与较弱势的群体(即财富和种族)相比,较特权的群体手机拥有率更高;(ii)手机拥有与心理健康的一个与文化相关的指标“平静感”呈正相关。结果表明,拥有手机的家庭平均财富水平更高,但按种族未发现显著差异。如假设的那样,在调整财富、种族以及作物种植土地和放牧土地数量后,对于附近没有家人(在该地区)的人来说,手机拥有与心理健康状况改善相关(p = 0.038)。对于附近有家人的人来说,手机拥有与心理健康状况改善没有显著关联。这些发现与撒哈拉以南非洲其他国家关于手机使用的研究一致,这些研究发现手机是社交联系的重要工具,因此有利于维系家庭关系。由此可以推断,对于住得离家人较远的人来说,这种心理健康状况的改善源于维持家庭联系的能力。这些发现与发达国家的研究截然不同,在发达国家,手机使用是与技术相关的压力或技术压力的一个来源。