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brainsmile
12-09-2005, 09:58 PM
http://news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20051209/hl_hsn/cellphonesaredisruptingfamilylife

FRIDAY, Dec. 9 (HealthDay News) -- Cell phones and pagers, part of the technological revolution that was supposed to liberate everyone, is tethering people to their jobs to an unprecedented degree, to the point where family life is suffering.

That's the unsettling conclusion of a new study that found the increased use of these communication commandos is bringing job worries home, stressing out the family lives of men and women alike.


The study limited the blame to cell phones and pages, and not computer-based communication such as e-mail. Cell phones and pagers were linked to increased psychological distress and reduced family satisfaction for both sexes.


But only women experience the opposite effect -- home problems and worries intruding into their work life as cell phones and pagers keep them on call nearly 24/7, the study found.


The research, by University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee sociologist Noelle Chesley, appears in the December issue of the Journal of Marriage and Family.


"The use of cell phones and pagers was linked to increased distress and a decrease in family satisfaction over time," said Chesley, an assistant professor of sociology. "There is clearly a link between using the technology and experiencing increased access."


For the study, Chesley interviewed working couples over two time periods -- from 1998 to 1999 and again from 2000 to 2001. She found that between the interview periods, the use of cell phones and pagers decreased family satisfaction and increased distress and negative work-to-family and family-to-work spillover.


"These technologies are linked to negative experiences and feelings from the workplace spilling over into the home," Chesley said. "We are becoming more accessible, which is letting in more of the bad than the good."


"Women get kind of a double whammy," she added. "For women, in addition to having a lot of this stuff from work spill over into home life, they get the opposite. There is also a lot of negative stuff from home spilling over into the workplace."


Chesley thinks that better management of cell phone use is needed to reduce the stress effect she uncovered. Perhaps employers and employees should set limits on reaching each other to allow time for more positive family interaction, she suggested.


"The question is, are these technologies helping us or hurting us in our daily life," Chesley asked. "The results of this study indicate that technology may not be so great."


One expert thinks the findings support the idea that cell phones are changing culture -- and not necessarily for the better.


"These findings seem to support my intuitions about how cell phones affect our daily lives -- blurring boundaries between work and family life because of increased accessibility," said Tate Kubose, a cognitive scientist at the University of Illinois Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology.


"They also support the notion that we should really appreciate our women more, as they seem to shoulder a lot of the burden, even in marriages where both spouses work," he added.

bachviet
12-09-2005, 11:26 PM
That's true.

sizemic1
12-10-2005, 08:10 AM
That's what the OFF button is for.

bachviet
12-10-2005, 08:46 AM
That's what the OFF button is for.
Not when your work involves "on called" like mine.

Markel
12-10-2005, 08:50 AM
From the beginning, I called pagers "electronic leashes". I was glad to not have one. Now, the same goes for company cell phones.

Grimm
12-10-2005, 12:19 PM
I remember when I was given a pager to keep with me at all times. I asked if I was going to be paid for the hours I kept it with me they laughed. I went home and replaced the battery with a dead AAA battery. Luckily, I had a large supply of dead AAA batterys from somewhere. They kept replacing the batterys but eventialy gave up and took the pager back.

nickel
12-10-2005, 12:38 PM
i have to agree. it used to be you could get into your car or go to the store and escape the phone. now it's a travelling companion interrupting free time.

attgig
12-10-2005, 06:56 PM
i hate my leash. i thought i had it bad with a cell phone, but it's 100% worse with a bberry.

kgsilvas
12-10-2005, 07:00 PM
I used to be a slave to the pager and phone 24x7. Changed jobs and enjoy being "leash free" after hours.

MikeD
12-10-2005, 07:09 PM
it's 100% worse with a bberry.

My BlackBerry is nothing more than my boss on my hip...:faint:

kimchicowboy
12-10-2005, 09:03 PM
i hate my leash. i thought i had it bad with a cell phone, but it's 100% worse with a bberry.
yupp. i vow NEVER to have a bberry or a company phone. EVER!

ialsohaveadream
12-11-2005, 09:18 AM
yupp. i vow NEVER to have a bberry or a company phone. EVER!
Keep vowing. I figured the same until I was given one. I even asked if I could refuse it...
"Only if you're going to take business calls on your personal cell phone."
"But I don't have a personal cell phone."
"Well then you're going to need this."

gaemul
12-20-2005, 12:37 AM
yup