Internet Addiction Prevalence and Quality of (Real) Life: A Meta-Analysis of 31 Nations Across Seven World Regions

University of Hong Kong

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Internet addiction (IA) has emerged as a universal issue, but its international estimates vary vastly. This multinational meta-analysis fills this gap by providing estimates of its global prevalence. Two hypotheses were formulated to explain the cross-national variations. The accessibility hypothesis predicts that IA prevalence is positively related to Internet penetration rate and GDP per capita, whereas the quality of (real) life hypothesis predicts that IA prevalence is inversely related to a global national index of life satisfaction and specific national indices of environmental quality. Multiple search strategies were used in an attempt to retrieve all empirical reports from 1996 to 2012 that adopted the…

Citation impact

721
total citations
FWCI
84.13
Percentile
100%
References
47
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Per capita
  • Meta-analysis
  • Demography
  • Quality of life (healthcare)
  • Geography
  • Addiction
  • The Internet
  • Medicine
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