Cordelia W. Carter, MD, pediatric orthopedic surgeon and director of the Pediatric Sports Medicine Center at Hassenfeld Children鈥檚 Hospital at 嘿嘿视频, has noticed an uptick in children coming into her office with neck, shoulder, or lower back problems鈥攁lso known as 鈥渢ext neck鈥濃攁nd it鈥檚 all related to posture and the angle their head and neck make when they look at their devices putting undue stress on the spine.
Although text neck is essentially an overuse injury, missing out on physical playtime is what Dr. Carter calls an underuse injury. 鈥淭he entire spinal column is lined on either side with very strong erector muscles that support the core. If those muscles are not actively engaged while you鈥檙e sitting, then they just weaken over time,鈥 Dr. Carter tells Good Housekeeping. 鈥淚f you鈥檙e not supporting your spine, the forces are being distributed across abnormally, and it ends up causing pain.鈥
Dr. Carter suggests cutting down on screen time, but also teaching your kids (and yourself) a few ergonomic techniques: holding your phone up higher at eye level to put less strain on your neck, resting a tablet on a thigh or table to ease the weight on your hands and wrists, and shifting positions while you sit with your device.
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