A young woman fixates over her cellphone.
A new study suggests that how you use your smartphone could shed light on whether you might suffer from depression. (For Spectrum Health Beat)

A new study suggests that how you use your smartphone could shed light on whether you might suffer from depression.

The small study—involving just 20 women and eight men, averaging 29 years of age—looked at data from the people’s phones to track the number of minutes they used their phone, as well as their locations throughout the day.

The researchers from Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago tracked two weeks’ of phone use and GPS data from the 28 participants’ smartphones.

The more time a person spent on his or her phone, the more likely they were to be depressed, according to the team led by clinical psychologist David Mohr, who directs the university’s Center for Behavioral Intervention Technologies.

For example, average daily smartphone use by those with depression was 68 minutes, compared with only 17 minutes by those without depression, his team found.

Also, the GPS data showed that people who were depressed tended to spend more time at home, or in fewer locations, compared to people who weren’t depressed. People who had less of a regular day-to-day schedule, or who left home and went to work at different times each day, were also more prone to depression, the researchers contended.

shlogotest

Phone Breakation

The more time spent with our noses buried in our phones, the more we tend to miss out on the good stuff in life. Take some time to focus on what is happening around you.

Check out the iOS app, Moment, to track you daily cell phone usage. This app helps to add balance to your life and keeps a record of how much you use your iPhone and iPad every day. If you find that you are using your phone too much, you can set daily limits.

Take a breakation from your phone, and don’t miss out on the little things in life that make a big difference.

Overall, the smartphone data was 87 percent accurate in spotting people with symptoms of depression, according to the study authors, who published the findings July 15 in the Journal of Medical Internet Research.

Mohr said in a university news release that he believes that simply by looking at phone data, “we can detect if a person has depressive symptoms and the severity of those symptoms without asking them any questions.”

What’s more, “phones can provide data unobtrusively and with no effort on the part of the user,” he said.

Two experts in psychiatric health took a more cautious view, however.

Dr. Aaron Pinkhasov is chair of the department of behavioral health at Winthrop-University Hospital in Mineola, N.Y. He agreed that “at least some patterns of data [from smartphones] seem to correlate with possible mood disorders.”

However, Pinkhasov said the study sample was slanted heavily towards older women, who tend to have higher rates of depression. He also believes that physicians and patients should be wary of relying too much “on technology and self-diagnosis” via smartphone.

But another expert said the study is in tune with a trend to track health and health care using new technologies.

“New ‘apps’ will help to identify high-risk patients and offer treatments that can help,” said Dr. Scott Krakower, assistant unit chief of psychiatry at Zucker Hillside Hospital in Glen Oaks, N.Y. “The question will be how to find a balance between finding the right treatment, while respecting privacy at the same time.”

“Of course,” he added, “we should not negate the value of human input—a continued, necessary staple in this computerized world.”