An examination of problematic mobile phone use in the United Arab Emirates: Prevalence, correlates, and predictors in a college-aged sample of young adults

Despite a number of benefits, mobile phones can carry many deleterious effects. We aimed to determine the extent of problematic mobile phone use in a sample of college-aged young adults in the United Arab Emirates. We also examined whether a number of factors were correlated with and predicted probl...

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Main Authors: Zahir Vally, Fatima El Hichami
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2019-06-01
Series:Addictive Behaviors Reports
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352853219300057
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spelling doaj-7651cd6fa42846938c359640f351272c2020-11-25T02:12:00ZengElsevierAddictive Behaviors Reports2352-85322019-06-019An examination of problematic mobile phone use in the United Arab Emirates: Prevalence, correlates, and predictors in a college-aged sample of young adultsZahir Vally0Fatima El Hichami1Department of Psychology & Counseling, United Arab Emirates University, United Arab Emirates; Corresponding author at: Department of Psychology & Counseling, United Arab Emirates University, P. O. Box 15551, Al Ain, United Arab Emirates.School of Nursing, Midwifery, and Health, Coventry University, United KingdomDespite a number of benefits, mobile phones can carry many deleterious effects. We aimed to determine the extent of problematic mobile phone use in a sample of college-aged young adults in the United Arab Emirates. We also examined whether a number of factors were correlated with and predicted problematic use. We conducted a cross-sectional, correlational study in which a sample of 350 young adults (M = 20.70, SD = 2.14, range: 18–33 years) completed a survey that included socio-demographic variables, and measures of problematic mobile phone use (MPPUS-10), depression, and low self-esteem. One third of the sample evidenced scores indicative of problematic mobile phone use (M = 47.14, SD = 19.98). Logistic regression identified female gender, increasing daily time using the mobile phone, and elevated depressive symptomology predicted higher MPPUS-10 scores. The MPPUS-10 evidenced acceptable reliability and validity in this sample. The prevalence of problematic mobile phone use was considerable in this sample, higher in comparison to previous reports from Europe and the Far East. Keywords: Smartphone, Mobile phone, Addictive behavior, Mobile dependence, Problematic use, Arab, Middle Easthttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352853219300057
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zahir Vally
Fatima El Hichami
spellingShingle Zahir Vally
Fatima El Hichami
An examination of problematic mobile phone use in the United Arab Emirates: Prevalence, correlates, and predictors in a college-aged sample of young adults
Addictive Behaviors Reports
author_facet Zahir Vally
Fatima El Hichami
author_sort Zahir Vally
title An examination of problematic mobile phone use in the United Arab Emirates: Prevalence, correlates, and predictors in a college-aged sample of young adults
title_short An examination of problematic mobile phone use in the United Arab Emirates: Prevalence, correlates, and predictors in a college-aged sample of young adults
title_full An examination of problematic mobile phone use in the United Arab Emirates: Prevalence, correlates, and predictors in a college-aged sample of young adults
title_fullStr An examination of problematic mobile phone use in the United Arab Emirates: Prevalence, correlates, and predictors in a college-aged sample of young adults
title_full_unstemmed An examination of problematic mobile phone use in the United Arab Emirates: Prevalence, correlates, and predictors in a college-aged sample of young adults
title_sort examination of problematic mobile phone use in the united arab emirates: prevalence, correlates, and predictors in a college-aged sample of young adults
publisher Elsevier
series Addictive Behaviors Reports
issn 2352-8532
publishDate 2019-06-01
description Despite a number of benefits, mobile phones can carry many deleterious effects. We aimed to determine the extent of problematic mobile phone use in a sample of college-aged young adults in the United Arab Emirates. We also examined whether a number of factors were correlated with and predicted problematic use. We conducted a cross-sectional, correlational study in which a sample of 350 young adults (M = 20.70, SD = 2.14, range: 18–33 years) completed a survey that included socio-demographic variables, and measures of problematic mobile phone use (MPPUS-10), depression, and low self-esteem. One third of the sample evidenced scores indicative of problematic mobile phone use (M = 47.14, SD = 19.98). Logistic regression identified female gender, increasing daily time using the mobile phone, and elevated depressive symptomology predicted higher MPPUS-10 scores. The MPPUS-10 evidenced acceptable reliability and validity in this sample. The prevalence of problematic mobile phone use was considerable in this sample, higher in comparison to previous reports from Europe and the Far East. Keywords: Smartphone, Mobile phone, Addictive behavior, Mobile dependence, Problematic use, Arab, Middle East
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352853219300057
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