“Doctor, He’s Only 15”: The Hidden Musculoskeletal Epidemic Among Tech-Hooked Teenagers

'Text neck' is no longer an adult problem. A neurologist explains why smartphones are leaving teenagers with neck, back and wrist pain—and what parents and schools can do to stop it

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“Doctor, he is only fifteen. Why does he already have neck pain?”

It is a question I now hear almost every day in my clinic.

Not long ago, chronic neck pain, shoulder stiffness, backache, and wrist problems were complaints of middle-aged office workers after years of desk jobs and repetitive strain. Today, many of the same symptoms walk into my clinic carried by school bags instead of briefcases.

As a neurologist, I usually evaluate headaches, tingling, numbness, and nerve-related symptoms. Increasingly, however, when I trace these complaints back to their source, the answer is often the same: hours spent each day with the neck bent over a six-inch screen. Teenagers are now presenting with persistent neck pain, aching shoulders, upper back stiffness, wrist pain, hand fatigue, and headaches that worsen after prolonged smartphone use. Some struggle to sit comfortably through classes, while others complain of pain while writing or tingling in their fingers after hours of gaming or scrolling.

Parents almost always recognise the problem. Most have tried to reduce screen time, and most admit defeat. “He studies on the phone.” “Her homework is online.” “Everyone in the class is on social media. “The smartphone has quietly become the most powerful member of many households. It accompanies children to the dining table, bedroom, study desk, family outings, and sometimes even the bathroom. Asking a teenager to put it away often feels like asking them to give up a part of their world.

The irony is hard to miss. We carefully choose ergonomic school bags to protect our children’s backs, yet many spend four to six hours every day with their necks bent over a small screen.

This article focuses only on the musculoskeletal and neurological consequences of excessive smartphone use. The behavioural, psychological, sleep-related, and social effects are equally important, but deserve a separate discussion.

Medical Evidence: The Global Teen Text Neck Crisis

What clinicians are seeing is now reflected in research.

A 2023 study among adolescents in Kolkata found that all participants used a smartphone, nearly one-third spent 3 hours or more daily on it, and almost half reported neck pain. From studies in West Bengal, AIIMS in New Delhi, JIPMER in Puducherry and Chennai, to research from Europe, North America, and East Asia, the message is remarkably consistent. Teenagers are spending unprecedented hours on digital devices, and the price is increasingly being paid by their necks, shoulders, backs, wrists, and hands. Although most studies are observational and cannot prove a direct cause-and-effect relationship, the consistency of findings across countries and populations makes the warning difficult to ignore.

Why Smartphones Damage Developing Teen Bodies

The obvious question then is: why are teenagers, who should be at the healthiest stage of life, developing these problems so early? A teenager’s body is still developing. Bones continue to grow, muscles are strengthening, ligaments remain adaptable, and the spine is still maturing. Yet modern technology asks this growing body to remain almost motionless for hours, with the head bent forward while the hands perform thousands of repetitive movements.

Unlike outdoor play or sports, smartphone use promotes prolonged static posture. The muscles are constantly working—but without movement. And muscles are simply not designed to stay still for hours. One of the best-known consequences is “text neck or tech neck.” When the head is upright, it weighs about 4–5 kilograms. As it tilts forward, the load on the cervical spine increases dramatically. Initially, the muscles cope. Eventually, they tire. Then they hurt.

Beyond Text Neck: Shoulder, Wrist, and Nerve Pain

The shoulders also suffer. Holding a phone encourages rounded shoulders and a hunched upper back, placing continuous strain on the muscles around the neck and shoulder blades. Over time, this leads to stiffness, fatigue, and persistent aching. The hands are equally affected. Scrolling, texting, gaming, and typing involve thousands of repetitive thumb and finger movements each day. I increasingly see teenagers with thumb pain, wrist discomfort, hand fatigue, and reduced grip strength—complaints that were once largely confined to adults with occupational repetitive strain injuries. The tingling some teenagers experience after prolonged gaming or scrolling should not be dismissed either. It may represent early nerve irritation caused by sustained wrist positioning and serves as an important warning that the body is under stress.

Movement Is the Best Medicine

Technology is not the enemy. The real problem is prolonged, uninterrupted use combined with poor posture.

Fortunately, many of these problems are preventable. Holding the phone closer to eye level, changing posture frequently, taking a short movement break every 20–30 minutes, stretching the neck, shoulders, and wrists, and using both hands while typing can substantially reduce mechanical strain. Equally important is ensuring that children spend at least an hour each day engaged in outdoor play, sports, or other physical activity.

These habits should not depend on parents alone. Schools must also prepare children for healthy digital living. Just as they teach nutrition, hygiene, and road safety, they should include digital ergonomics in health education. Short stretching breaks during classes, encouraging reading printed books alongside digital learning, and promoting regular participation in outdoor games and sports can go a long way in protecting children’s developing bodies.

Parents, too, must lead by example. A parent asking a child to put away the phone while remaining glued to one themselves sends a mixed message. Screen-free family meals, dedicated no-phone hours at home, reading books together, taking evening walks, and playing outdoor games create habits that children naturally imitate. Healthy digital behaviour is far easier to model than to enforce.

Protecting Teen Physical Health in a Digital World

Smartphones are now indispensable for education, communication, and daily life. Asking teenagers to abandon them is neither practical nor desirable. But normalising pain in adolescence is equally unacceptable. Neck pain, shoulder stiffness, backache, wrist pain, and posture-related headaches should not become part of growing up. The question is no longer whether smartphones are here to stay—they are. The real question is whether we can teach children to use them without sacrificing their physical health.

Dr Haseeb Hassan
Dr Haseeb Hassanhttps://www.healthcarescan.in/
Dr. Haseeb is a leading senior Neurologist and Director of Healthcare Scan Diagnostic, Kolkata. A highly credentialed specialist with an MBBS, MD (General Medicine), DM (Neurology), and a Fellowship in Epilepsy, he is the former Head of the Department of Neurology at NH-RTIics, Kolkata. His career is dedicated to advancing neurological care and diagnostic excellence.

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