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Internet addiction impacts Australian kids, with some who will refuse to go to school

Aussie kids are struggling with socialising again after being kept at home for so long, with many parents needing help. Here, experts explain what you can do.

World Health Organisation makes gaming addiction an official disease

Exclusive: Many children will return to the classroom next month with a “digital hangover”, while one in ten will struggle to adjust and some will simply refuse to go.

Experts also warn some kids have become so sedentary, playing games and surfing the internet, they risk suffering stress fractures in their legs when restarting school sport.

“In more severe cases of gaming disorder, along with school refusal and Covid isolation periods, I have seen an increase in children with physical injuries including hairline bone fractures, muscle injuries and eye strain,” Internet Addiction Clinic Director at Kidspace Brad Marshall said.

The latest research shows one to three per cent of Australian children have a gaming disorder, while one in 10 are at risk of “problematic levels of internet use”.

Internet Addiction Clinic Director at Kidspace and child psychologist Brad Marshall. Picture: Supplied
Internet Addiction Clinic Director at Kidspace and child psychologist Brad Marshall. Picture: Supplied

Screen addiction is not officially recognised, however, the World Health Organisation added ‘online gaming disorder’ to its official list of mental health conditions in 2019.

Mr Marshall said while more boys than girls are into gaming, girls tend to spend a lot of time on social media.

“Some kids can be on TikTok for seven to eight hours a day,” he said.

He said Covid restrictions and lockdowns, followed by the long summer holiday, had exacerbated the problem.

“Every year when the new school term starts, the clinic is inundated with worried parents needing help because their children don’t want to go back,” Mr Marshall said.

“It’s going to be worse this year.”

Dr Kristy Goodwin’s 5 tips to reduce your child’s tech use

  • Control the controllables. Monitor what they’re watching and where and when they’re watching it and then aim for equal amounts of screen and green time.
  • Ensure that screen time is not eroding basic needs such as sleep. Have a digital curfew of 60 minutes before bed and keep devices out of the bedrooms.
  • Young people are more sedentary than ever. Make sure they do things that give them natural highs, exercise and getting out in the sunlight.
  • Be a good digital role model, restrict your own use.
  • Make a family New Year resolution. Construct a digital wellbeing plan you can all agree on.

He said some children are just anxious about seeing people face-to-face after spending so much time alone.

He said some of his young patients will only see a friend once or twice during the holidays, preferring to ‘socialise’ online.

Mr Marshall said he didn’t blame parents, they needed help.

“There’s been such a generational change from when we were kids and our parents were trying to get us to come in the house, now the parents are trying to get them out,” he said.

Dr Kristy Goodwin at home with her children, Taj, 6, and Billy, 3. Picture: Justin Lloyd
Dr Kristy Goodwin at home with her children, Taj, 6, and Billy, 3. Picture: Justin Lloyd

Digital wellbeing author and public speaker Dr Kristy Goodwin said she has seen a 92 per cent increase in the number of parents signing up for her talks during the pandemic.

“Parents are realising problematic internet use is not just a fad of a phase,” she said.

“What I am seeing is a digital hangover.”

What the internet is doing to your kids’ health

  • Disrupted sleep patterns
  • Increased levels of childhood obesity (linked to increased prevalence of adult obesity and chronic disease including type 2 diabetes, some cancers, stroke, heart attack, musculoskeletal impairment).
  • Increased exposure to fast food advertising associated with higher consumption of fast food/junk food.
  • Lower psychological wellbeing.


University of Queensland Child Health Research Centre Research Fellow, Suzie Harte

Les Stock, stepfather to a 17-year-old Sydney boy whose gaming addiction used to be so bad he refused to go to school and would only leave the house once a week, said he still plays games but spends less time online.

He’s now back in the classroom studying cyber security at TAFE.

“I think he will be brilliant at cyber security,” he said. “He has an incredible brain.”

Mr Stock set up a private Facebook support group for parents called Online Gaming Addiction with 1600 followers and said it showed how many other parents were struggling with the issue too.

Melissa Dickfos, 39, Sienna, 11, Rowan, 39, and William, 10. Picture: Melissa Batterham - Mia Mia Photography.
Melissa Dickfos, 39, Sienna, 11, Rowan, 39, and William, 10. Picture: Melissa Batterham - Mia Mia Photography.

Mum-of-two Melissa Dickfos, 39, from Toowoomba in Queensland, said she was a “hard taskmaster” when it came to monitoring her children’s online activities.

She said Sienna, 11, and William, 10, were allowed one to two hours a day during the school term as long as their homework and chores were completed.

In the holidays the rules are relaxed, and they will spend more time on their iPads or the Xbox, but tend to get bored and want to do other things.

“Sometimes they push the boundaries like all children, but I’m vigilant,” Mrs Dickfos said.

Originally published as Internet addiction impacts Australian kids, with some who will refuse to go to school

Original URL: https://www.goldcoastbulletin.com.au/technology/internet-addiction-impacts-australian-kids-with-some-who-will-refuse-to-go-to-school/news-story/bcf4cf355d077053462c2c97c930d5cd