
Experts: Information onslaught bad for your health
April 15, 1997
Web posted at: 5:43 p.m. EDT (2143 GMT)
From Correspondent Kathy Nellis
(CNN) -- Sick of the information age? You're not alone.
There's so much data out there -- on television, in books, on
billboards, in magazines and newspapers and on the Internet - - that
it's making some people physically ill, according to some experts.
Psychologists even have a name for the malady: Information Fatigue
Syndrome.
'We're often seeing a failure of concentration. We're seeing a
loss of motivation, loss of morale. We're seeing greater
irritability.'
- -- Psychologist David
Lewis
They
say the illness isn't just mental.
"On the physical
level, you might find people having digestive problems," said
psychologist David Lewis. "They may, if the stress is chronic,
have problems with their heart -- hypertension, high blood
pressure."
Other possible
consequences: sleep disorders and adverse effects on personal and sex
lives.
Some say the Internet's to blame. In a survey of managers conducted
by Reuters, nearly half said they thought the Internet will be a prime
cause of information overload in the next two years.
"We did the survey in five international centers ... the U.K.,
the U.S., Hong Kong, Singapore and Australia," said Paul
Waddington of Reuters Business Information. "And we
interviewed about 1,300 people and the report did show some very
interesting findings -- that people genuinely suffer from information
overload. There's a business cost and a human cost to it."
A third of the managers in the Reuter survey said they suffered
from stress-related health problems brought on by too much
information.
Forty-three percent said they had trouble making important
decisions because they had too much information.
And almost two thirds said their personal relationships suffered
because of information overload.
Experts say the syndrome isn't just annoying -- it's dangerous.
Their advice:
- Learn to pace yourself.
- Take breaks to give your brain time to absorb information.
- Know when to skim and when to study.
In a word, says Lewis, lighten up.
"No matter how interesting your job is, it's probably not
worth dying for," he says. "I do think there are people out
there who are dying because they're getting too much information and
they don't know how to handle it."
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