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Nomophobia in Lebanon: Scale validation and association with psychological aspects

TLDR
In this paper, a multinomial regression was computed taking the nomophobia categories as the dependent variable (and taking the absence of nomophobia as the reference category) and all variables that showed a significant association in bivariate analysis as independent variables.
Abstract
Objectives Nomophobia, an abbreviation of "No mobile phone phobia", is characterized by the illogical fear of being detached from the mobile phone or unable to use it. Research have provided evidence of an association between increased cellular phone use and multiple health issues, such as anxiety, depression, insomnia, and others. To our knowledge, there are no Lebanese studies about nomophobia, despite the high incorporation rate of mobile phones in Lebanon and the likelihood of suffering from anxiety, depression, and other conditions due to nomophobic attitudes. The study objectives were to validate and confirm psychometric properties of the Nomophobia Questionnaire (NMP-Q) and examine the associations between particular psychological conditions (anxiety, depression, stress, insomnia and impulsivity) and nomophobia among a representative sample of Lebanese people. Methods This cross-sectional study was carried out between January and July 2019. It enrolled 2260 residents of the community randomly selected from Lebanon's Mohafazat. Two villages per sub-district and households from each village were chosen using a random sampling technique. A questionnaire was distributed randomly to the households. SPSS version 25 was used to perform the statistical analysis. A multinomial regression was computed taking the nomophobia categories as the dependent variable (and taking the absence of nomophobia as the reference category) and all variables that showed a significant association in the bivariate analysis as independent variables. Results A total of 2260 (80.71%) out of 2800 questionnaires distributed was collected back. The mean age of the participants was 27.98 ± 9.66 years (58.8% females). Moreover, the mean nomophobia score was 71.56 ± 26.92 (median = 71; minimum = 14; maximum = 140). The results showed that 46 (2.0%) had no nomophobia, 769 (34.1%) mild nomophobia [95% CI 0.322-0.361], 1089 (48.3%) moderate nomophobia [95% CI 0.463-0.504] and 349 (15.5%) severe nomophobia [95% CI 0.140-0.170]. Items of the nomophobia scale converged over a solution of three factors that had an Eigenvalue over 1 (Factor 1 = emotions associated to losing connectedness, Factor 2 = not being able to communicate, Factor 3 = not being able to access information; total variance explained = 66.65%, and Cronbach's alpha = 0.948). The results of a multinomial regression, taking the nomophobia score as the dependent variable, showed that higher age was significantly associated with lower odds of having mild (aOR = 0.97), moderate (aOR = 0.93) and severe (aOR = 0.97) nomophobia respectively. Higher anxiety (aOR = 1.09) and higher insomnia (aOR = 1.04) were significantly associated with higher odds of having severe nomophobia. Conclusion The results suggest a positive correlation between nomophobia and psychological conditions. There is a need for longitudinal and prospective studies that furnish information with regards of the impact of time on the variables measured, in order to better understand the nature, causes, and attributes of nomophobia.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Problematic smartphone use and affective temperaments among Lebanese young adults: scale validation and mediating role of self-esteem.

TL;DR: In this paper, a cross-sectional study was carried out between August and September 2020, using a sample of community-dwelling participants aged 18 to 29 years, and the Smartphone Addiction Scale-Short Version was used to evaluate smartphone addiction among adolescents and adults.
Journal ArticleDOI

Symptoms of Nomophobia, Psychological Aspects, Insomnia and Physical Activity: A Cross-Sectional Study of ESports Players in Saudi Arabia

TL;DR: High prevalence of nomophobia, anxiety and insomnia among eSP compared to NeSP is reported and except for food addiction and physical activity, a positive correlation was identified between symptoms of Nomophobia, Anxiety and insomniaamong eSP.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nomophobia is Associated with Insomnia but Not with Age, Sex, BMI, or Mobile Phone Screen Size in Young Adults.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the association between nomophobia, insomnia, and mobile phone screen size in a young adult population in Bahrain, and found a strong positive pair-wise linear association was observed between NMP-Q and ISI β 0.15, P = 0.001.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Social Media Outage Was Associated with a Surge in Nomophobia, and the Magnitude of Change in Nomophobia during the Outage Was Associated with Baseline Insomnia

TL;DR: In this paper , the immediate impact of a social media outage on nomophobia and associated symptoms using a longitudinal cohort design was examined using a questionnaire (NMP-Q), generalized anxiety disorder-7 scale (GAD-7), and Athens insomnia scale (AIS).
Journal ArticleDOI

Smartphone addiction and personality traits among Lebanese adults: the mediating role of self-esteem.

TL;DR: A cross-sectional study was carried out between August and September 2020, during the lockdown period imposed by the government for the COVID-19 pandemic and that coincides with the summer season vacation for most Lebanese, using a sample of community-dwelling participants aged 18 to 29 years as mentioned in this paper.
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TL;DR: Hu and Bentler as mentioned in this paper proposed a more rigorous approach to evaluating decision rules based on GOF indexes and, on this basis, proposed new and more stringent cutoff values for many indexes.
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Psychological predictors of problem mobile phone use

TL;DR: This study supports community concerns about mobile phone use, identifies groups that should be targeted in any intervention campaigns, and supports extraverts and young drivers in automobile accidents.
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