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Lots of video gaming in kids ups anxiety

AMES, Iowa, Jan. 18 (UPI) -- A study of children in Singapore found those who play 20 hours of video games a week are more likely than others to be anxious or depressed, researchers say.

However, the study published online ahead of print in February's Pediatrics, says spending many hours with a PlayStation or an Xbox daily can lead to serious psychiatric problems in children, and "pathological" video game playing may not be just a result of pre-existing mental disorders, MedPage Today reported.

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Douglas Gentile of Iowa State University in Ames, Iowa, and colleagues say depression, social difficulties and poor school performance seemed to act as outcomes of pathological gaming.

Video game-playing habits were considered pathological when children considered themselves to have at least five or 10 behaviors listed on a questionnaire, such as the hours spent playing video games, whether schoolwork suffered or whether they ever stole money to buy games, Gentile says.

The researchers also find that after the two-year study of 3,000 children, the more pathological gaming symptoms participants had at baseline, the more likely they were at the last follow-up to show symptoms of depression, anxiety, social phobia and lower school grades.

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The researchers say they do not see why the findings may not apply to other countries.

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