Pal Sushma, Sharma Sachin Kumar, Singhal Aditi, Telles Shirley
Department of Patanjali Research Foundation, Haridwar, Uttarakhand, India.
Indian J Community Med. 2022 Apr-Jun;47(2):292-295. doi: 10.4103/ijcm.ijcm_601_21. Epub 2022 Jul 11.
Addictive behavior can be effectively managed with yoga. This study compared smartphone use, self-rated sleep, and beliefs about well-being in university students who practiced yoga regularly with those who did not.
One hundred and forty-two university students (average age ± standard deviation: 20.2 ± 2.2; male: female = 1:1) who practiced yoga (90 min a day, 6 days a week, and 29.7 months) were compared for smartphone excessive use, self-rated sleep, and beliefs about well-being, with an equal number of comparable age- and gender-distributed university students who did not practice yoga.
The yoga group had lower scores on the short version of the Smartphone Addiction Scale with fewer nocturnal episodes of checking their smartphone. The nonyoga group reported longer nocturnal sleep time compared to the yoga group, whereas there was no significant difference in the beliefs about well-being scores between the two groups.
University students who practice yoga may be less likely to use a smartphone excessively as well as have uninterrupted sleep than students who do not practice yoga.
成瘾行为可以通过瑜伽得到有效控制。本研究比较了经常练习瑜伽的大学生与不练习瑜伽的大学生在智能手机使用、自我评定睡眠及幸福感信念方面的差异。
将142名练习瑜伽(每天90分钟,每周6天,共29.7个月)的大学生(平均年龄±标准差:20.2±2.2;男女比例为1:1)与同等数量、年龄和性别分布相当但不练习瑜伽的大学生进行比较,评估他们的智能手机过度使用情况、自我评定睡眠及幸福感信念。
瑜伽组在智能手机成瘾量表简版上得分较低,夜间查看智能手机的次数较少。与瑜伽组相比,非瑜伽组报告的夜间睡眠时间更长,而两组在幸福感得分信念方面无显著差异。
与不练习瑜伽的学生相比,练习瑜伽的大学生过度使用智能手机的可能性较小,且睡眠更不受干扰。