He checks his phone an estimated 180 times a day. The first thing he does when he opens his eyes in the morning is pick it up. The last thing he does before he goes to sleep is put it down. In the bathroom, he is scrolling. During meals with his family, he is half-present because his phone is on the table. In meetings, he is glancing down every few minutes. He has noticed that he no longer enjoys anything quite as much as he used to, that his attention span has become shorter than it has ever been, that his sleep is worse, and that he feels a strange low-level anxiety most of the time. He has tried to cut down. He has deleted apps and reinstalled them a week later. He has tried rules and broken them within days. He has started to wonder if he is actually addicted to his phone — and if so, whether anyone treats that. The answer is yes. It is a real and growing clinical concern, and yes, it can be treated.
If you have been wondering whether your relationship with your phone has become a problem, please read this blog. At Bharosa, we see patients with problematic screen use in our LB Nagar OPD, and we want to share what the research actually says. Phone and screen addiction is increasingly recognised as a clinical issue, particularly in adolescents and young adults, and help is available for people who want to regain control of their attention and their lives.
The diagnostic picture is still developing, but the research is clear that problematic digital behaviour can cause significant harm to mental health, sleep, relationships, and daily functioning. The World Health Organization has formally recognised gaming disorder in its International Classification of Diseases, which is the first time a specific digital behaviour has been classified as a clinical condition. The American Psychiatric Association has listed internet gaming disorder as a condition for further study. Harvard Medical School has published extensive research on the mental health effects of problematic smartphone and screen use.
Even without a formal diagnosis of smartphone addiction, the pattern of compulsive use, loss of control, continuation despite harm, and withdrawal-like symptoms when the phone is unavailable meets the functional definition of a behavioural addiction — similar in many ways to gambling addiction. The clinical approach to treating it draws from the same principles.
Modern smartphones are not neutral tools. They are carefully designed to capture and hold your attention for as long as possible. Every app has been optimised — often by large teams of behavioural psychologists and engineers — to maximise engagement. Notifications, infinite scroll, auto-play videos, variable reward systems (you never know what the next post will bring), and social feedback loops are all designed to activate the same brain reward pathways involved in traditional addictions. You are not weak for finding this hard to resist. You are a normal human brain up against technology that has been engineered to be maximally compelling.
Understanding this is important because it removes shame. The problem is not that you lack willpower. The problem is that you are using devices that were designed to exploit the reward system in your brain. Treating the problem requires recognising that you are not in a fair fight, and building strategies that account for that reality.
Using your phone more than you intended, for longer periods than you planned. Feeling restless, anxious, or irritable when you cannot use your phone. Using your phone to regulate emotions — to escape, soothe, or distract yourself from feelings. Loss of interest in activities you used to enjoy that do not involve a screen. Neglecting relationships, work, or responsibilities because of phone use. Using your phone in dangerous situations — while driving, while walking in traffic, or while caring for young children. Lying to others about the amount of time spent on your phone. Trying to cut down and being unable to. Sleep disruption from phone use. Feeling empty, anxious, or low when not using your phone. These signs point to problematic use that may benefit from clinical help.
Research has linked heavy smartphone and social media use to increased rates of depression, anxiety, sleep problems, loneliness, attention difficulties, and lower self-esteem — particularly in adolescents and young adults. The effects are strongest for passive scrolling, social comparison content, and late-night use that disrupts sleep. Not all screen time is equal — using your phone to video-call a loved one is different from endlessly scrolling short video content — but the evidence for harm from the heaviest, most passive forms of use is now substantial.
Sleep is one of the most affected areas. Phone use close to bedtime delays sleep onset, reduces sleep quality, and disrupts the natural wind-down process. The blue light from screens affects melatonin production, and the stimulating content keeps the brain alert. Poor sleep then affects mood, concentration, and overall functioning, creating a cycle that is hard to break without addressing the screen use directly.
Treatment approaches for problematic screen use draw from the broader field of behavioural addiction treatment. Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) is the most widely used approach and has good evidence for internet gaming disorder and problematic screen use. CBT helps the person understand their patterns, identify triggers, build alternative coping strategies, and gradually rebuild a healthier relationship with their devices.
Treating underlying conditions is often essential. Problematic screen use is frequently a way of coping with underlying depression, anxiety, loneliness, boredom, trauma, or ADHD. When these underlying conditions are treated, the compulsive use often reduces significantly. Treating only the screen use without addressing what is driving it usually does not work long-term.
Practical strategies include removing social media and other problem apps from the phone, using greyscale mode to make the phone less visually engaging, turning off non-essential notifications, setting specific phone-free times and locations (meals, bedroom, first hour of the morning), and using app timers. These strategies work best as part of a larger plan, not as isolated fixes.
Digital minimalism approaches — deliberately reducing digital consumption and rebuilding analog activities like reading, exercise, face-to-face relationships, and hobbies — have become popular and have good real-world results for many people who implement them seriously.
At Bharosa, our consultant MD Psychiatrists and clinical psychologists assess patients with problematic screen use and its consequences. We look at the whole picture — the screen use itself, the underlying emotional drivers, the co-occurring mental health conditions, and the impact on life and relationships.
Treatment typically combines Cognitive Behavioural Therapy, treatment for underlying depression, anxiety, or ADHD where present, practical digital wellbeing strategies, and family support where relevant. Our goal is not to make you give up your phone entirely. Our goal is to help you build a relationship with your devices that serves your life instead of consuming it.
Patients often tell us, after a few weeks of proper treatment, that they have rediscovered their attention — the ability to focus on a conversation, finish a book, sit quietly without reaching for a screen. They sleep better. They feel less anxious. They connect more with the people around them. This is what life on the other side of problematic screen use looks like, and it is available in Hyderabad today. You can use your phone again without your phone using you.
Q: Is smartphone addiction a real medical condition?
A: Gaming disorder is formally recognised. Broader smartphone addiction is still being studied but treatment approaches are well-established.
Q: How much screen time is too much?
A: Quality matters more than raw hours. The problem is when use is compulsive, distressing, and harmful.
Q: Can I cut down on my own?
A: Many can with awareness and practical strategies. Others need professional support, especially if underlying issues are driving the use.
Q: Will I need to give up my phone entirely?
A: Usually no. The goal is balanced, intentional use, not complete abstinence.
Q: Does Bharosa treat screen addiction in Hyderabad?
A: Yes. Behavioural addiction care is available at our LB Nagar facility.
If your phone is running your life instead of supporting it, help exists. Bharosa offers digital wellbeing care in Hyderabad. Call +91 95050 58886.

Mental health struggles do not define you, and you don’t have to face them alone. If you notice any early signs of mental health disorders in yourself or a family member, take the first step today.