British Columbia

Digital addiction becoming more prevalent

The Richmond Addiction Services says it deals with roughly 20 to 30 new families every year that need help overcoming digital addictions.

Richmond Addiction Services says it deals with roughly 20 to 30 families annually

Battling digital addiction

10 years ago
Duration 2:06
Richmond Addiction Services sees 20 to 30 families every year

There's a reason some call their BlackBerry smartphone a 'CrackBerry.'

The Richmond Addiction Services, in B.C., has been helping young people overcome their digital addictions since 2007 and says it deals with roughly 20 to 30 new families every year that need help with digital addictions. 

Benjamin Wong, a counsellor at Richmond Addiction Services, said he works with individuals between the ages of 12 to 25 and their families to support them in dealing with digital addictions — when they just can't separate themselves from a screen, be it a smartphone, computer or gaming device.

"When behaviour affects school attendance, when behaviour affects relationships, when their behaviour affects their ability to hold on to employment, sleep hygiene, nutrition ... those are things we look at," Wong said. 

Wong said it takes six months to one year to break an addiction and for addicted individuals to learn to cope with their emotions.

"We're trying to break a habit. It takes time to form new habits, new neurological systems to break some of the things that they had been so conditioned to be around."

Take the poll: Do you spend too much time with your digital devices?

With files from Jeff Harrington