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7/12/2005

Computer Video Games Do Have Benefits

Categories:
  • ADHD: Children
  • ADHD: video games

The BBC reports that video games can have positive benefits, just not where one would expect them. Note, too, in the following report, no decision was made regarding chronic use and its effects.

Computer games ‘do have benefits’

Computer games can aid children’s health and do not deserve a wholly negative reputation, an expert says.

Mark Griffiths, professor of gambling studies at Nottingham Trent University, says they can be a distraction for children undergoing painful treatment.

Writing in the British Medical Journal, he added that games can also help children with attention deficit disorders gain social skills.

But he said violent games, like violent films, might fuel aggression in some.

You can’t tar all games with the same brush Professor Mark Griffiths,
Nottingham Trent University

However, Professor Griffiths said this group could be prone to aggression, which could have been triggered by other factors such as witnessing violence in the home or seeing it on TV.

After 15 years of research into video games, Professor Griffiths said he wanted to redress the balance of public perception of their effects.

He said games could be used as a very powerful form of distraction for children undergoing painful treatments.

Professor Griffiths pointed to studies which had shown children undergoing chemotherapy and treatment for sickle cell anaemia had benefited from being given games to distract then.

He said they needed less pain relief and had less nausea and lower blood pressure than those who were simply told to rest after their treatments.

‘Trivialised’

Professor Griffiths also highlighted specific cases where video games had been used to help treat specific physical conditions, including an eight-year-old boy whose illness caused him to pick his lip, causing scarring.

Previous treatments had failed so the boy was given a hand-held video game to keep his hands occupied.

Two weeks later the affected area had healed.

Computer games have even been used as a form of physiotherapy for arm injuries

Professor Griffiths told the BBC News website: "You can’t tar all games with the same brush.

"Video gaming is safe for most players and can be useful in healthcare.

"Although playing video games is one of the most popular leisure activities in the world, research into its effects on players, both positive and negative, is often trivialised."

He added: "On balance, there is little evidence that moderate frequency of play has serious adverse effects, but more evidence is needed on excessive play and on defining what constitutes excess in the first place.

"There should also be long-term studies of the course of video game
addiction."

‘Scapegoat’

He said it was possible games could fuel violence in some.

But he added: "It is not possible to say what is cause and effect. These could be aggressive individuals who sought out these games.

"And aggression could stem from seeing violence on TV or in the home."

Dr Guy Cumberbatch, head of the independent Communications Research Group in the UK, agreed with the editorial’s conclusions.

"Video games are always used as a scapegoat for concerns.

"There’s no doubt that many games are found to be offensive by many. But there are many media forms, films or TV programmes, where that is the case."


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