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Thursday, November 25, 2010

[ALOCHONA] Re: Facebook can trigger extreme stress reactions

It is unbelievable and not the fault of social network. It may happen in road , people may heartfelt after seeing his/her ex- girl/boy friend . I have seen number of news in the news paper that number of people committed suicide after the death of dhakai hero salman shah. It is the age of socialization that we need run with. We may say mobile is not good for health but will we able to continue our todays life without mobile?

Regards
Munmun akter (ria)
http://www.jompesh.com


--- In alochona@yahoogroups.com, Isha Khan <bdmailer@...> wrote:
>
> *Facebook can trigger extreme stress reactions*
>
> LONDON: After a teenager suffered asthma attacks caused by seeing his
> ex-girlfriend online, doctors are now warning that social networking website
> Facebook could trigger extreme stress reactions.
>
> The depressed 18-year-old, who was denied access to her site after the
> break-up, was able to log back in using a made-up nickname. But the shock of
> seeing her brought on an asthma attack, which was repeated each time he
> looked at his ex-girlfriend's profile, reports medical journal The Lancet.
>
> Doctors in Italy claim social networking websites may be "a new source of
> psychological stress", according to the Daily Mail. Gennaro D'Amato, of the
> Antonio Cardarelli High Speciality Hospital, Naples, Italy and colleagues,
> said the patient was depressed after breaking up with the girl who had also
> deleted him from her site, while "friending' (sic) many new young men.
>
> By disguising himself with a new Facebook nickname, he managed to become her
> friend once more and was confronted by her picture.
>
> The sight of this seemed to induce shortness of breath, which happened
> whenever the patient viewed her profile. After advice from the doctors, the
> man's mother asked him to check his lung capacity using a peak flow meter
> which showed it was cut by more than 20 per cent during these episodes.
>
> "In collaboration with a psychiatrist, the patient resigned not to login to
> Facebook any longer and the asthma attacks stopped," say study authors. "We
> suggest that this type of trigger be considered in the assessment of asthma
> exacerbations."
>
> http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Tech-Social-Media/Facebook-can-trigger-extreme-stress-reactions/articleshow/6953156.cms
>


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