Earlier, in January 2015, a 16-year-old suffered 90 per cent
burns while performing a stunt on the roof of a train while trying to click a
selfie. He had received an electric shock from a 25,000-volt overhead wire.
Throwing light upon the growing selfie addiction, Dr Sagar
Mundada, psychiatrist, JJ Hospital, said, “In the past one year, 12 people have
died in accidents while clicking selfies. It is becoming an addiction. I have
seen two cases where if the patients don’t click at least five selfies every
day, they would become very anxious.”
According to a study, ‘Selfie syndrome: An Infectious Gift
of IT to Health Care’ published in Journal of Lung, Pulmonary and Respiratory,
in 2015, “Selfie addiction is a new pathology, often related to past bullying
and low self-esteem. Psychiatrists are beginning to consider the compulsion to
take selfies as a serious mental health problem, although precise mechanism of
selfie syndrome is not known but it is assumed to be due to imbalance between
the excitatory and inhibitory Neuro transmitter”.
As per the study, the selfie obsession, in the long run, can
distract patients in the workplace. It can also lead to an unhealthy
professional life, unhealthy family relations and marital conflicts.
“It may lead to orthopaedic complications or injuries due to
prolonged use of the thumbs for typing, awkward posture of the body while using
the phone or computer for social media and even catastrophic road traffic
accidents while using phones during driving,” stated the study.
Explaning the reasons behind the rising trend, Dr Chhavi
Khanna, clinical psychologist, Hinduja Hospital, said, “With the growing usage
of smartphones and social media, people are becoming more obsessed with their
looks. And to garner more attention, they keep clicking pictures and posting
them on social media. In fact, many people go into depression.”
Many experts say that the obsession is related to Body
Dysmorphic Disorder (BDD), which makes people ashamed of their ‘imperfections’,
which affects their self-confidence. “People with BDD can develop a dislike for
any part of their body like hair, skin, nose, height, body or weight. In
reality, it can be a slight imperfection but to them it is so significant and
evident that it
causes emotional distress, which leads them to take more
selfies,” said Naseem Kachwala Lokhandwala, counselling psychologist.
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