Postural and Musculoskeletal Effects of Smartphone Use on the Neck and Upper Extremities in University Students

Authors

  • Ramiza khalid Government College University Faisalabad, Faisalabad, Pakistan Author
  • Syed Asadullah Arslan The Superior University Lahore, Lahore, Pakistan Author
  • Abdul Jalil khan NHS London, London, United Kingdom Author
  • Muhammad Usman Khan Ziauddin University Karachi, Karachi, Pakistan Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.61919/wg24bx41

Keywords:

smartphone use; neck pain; upper extremity; posture; musculoskeletal symptoms; university students

Abstract

Background: Smartphone use is highly prevalent among university students and commonly involves sustained neck flexion and unsupported upper-limb postures, which may be associated with musculoskeletal symptoms of the neck and upper extremities. Objective: To estimate the prevalence of neck and upper-extremity symptoms among university smartphone users and to evaluate associations between symptoms and self-reported smartphone-use posture (neck posture, back support, and arm support). Methods: A cross-sectional survey was conducted in 2018 among 180 university students (18–30 years) who used smartphones for at least four hours daily and reported at least one year of smartphone exposure. A structured questionnaire assessed demographics, smartphone-use patterns, postures during use (neck flexed vs neutral; back supported vs unsupported; arm raised with vs without support), and symptom presence and characteristics. Associations were tested using chi-square analyses with effect sizes summarized as odds ratios. Results: Overall, 171/180 participants reported at least one neck or upper-extremity symptom (95.0%). Pain was the most common symptom (53.9%), and the neck was the most frequently affected region (47.2%). Symptom prevalence was higher in participants reporting flexed neck posture (144/144; 100.0%) than neutral posture (27/36; 75.0%) (p<0.001), and in those using unsupported raised-arm posture (122/123; 99.2%) than supported posture (49/57; 86.0%) (p<0.001). Unsupported back posture was also associated with higher symptom prevalence (97/99; 98.0%) than supported back posture (74/81; 91.4%) (p=0.043). Conclusion: Neck and upper-extremity symptoms were highly prevalent and were associated with forward-flexed neck posture and unsupported raised-arm posture during smartphone use.

 

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Published

2025-02-05

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How to Cite

1.
Ramiza khalid, Syed Asadullah Arslan, Abdul Jalil khan, Muhammad Usman Khan. Postural and Musculoskeletal Effects of Smartphone Use on the Neck and Upper Extremities in University Students. JHWCR [Internet]. 2025 Feb. 5 [cited 2026 Feb. 4];3(1):e146. Available from: https://www.jhwcr.com/index.php/jhwcr/article/view/1146

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