Researcher Says Gaming Deforms Young Hands

Andy Chalk

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Nov 12, 2002
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Researcher Says Gaming Deforms Young Hands


Engineer Mike Tomich is warning parents not to let their young children play videogames because the soft, uncalcified bones in their hands can be bent and twisted, leading to dysfunction, arthritis and other serious problems in the future.

Tomich, a former "quality engineer in the automotive, agriculture, U.S. Department of Defense and the robotics industry," has spent the past 5.5 years researching the damaging effects of videogaming on children under eight years of age in order to determine "why his grandson and other young children developed bent/twisted arthritic fingers," he says on his website. He has also published a book on the topic, Our Silent Epidemic, and has testimonials from two medical doctors and former Michigan Representative Tom Meyer.

"Children develop the injuries because their bones are too soft (not calcified hard) and readily yield to the strong repeating forces," Tomich wrote. "The permanent and accumulative damage from these forces is silently inflicted without pain because of the numbing effects they deliver to the soft bones."

Early-life button mashing permanently bends fingers and twists knuckles, according to Tomich, resulting in a variety of ailments including "hand/finger functionality losses... crippling arthritis, reduced gripping strength, and loss of meaningful thumb use." The process is fast and painless because of the softness of young bones and Tomich warns that simply reducing the amount of game time isn't adequate, as permanent damage can be seen in children's hands after only six months of casual gaming. Videogames are his primary target but Tomich also has worries about Crayons, saying that parents shouldn't let kids play with them until they are least five years old, not because they'll eat them or cram them up their noses but because the pressures caused by holding and coloring with them can also can deformities.

It all sounds awfully dodgy to me and some of his "supporting evidence" doesn't do much to smooth those waters. He alleges that the videogame industry is using its political muscle to prevent studies on this problem from being undertaken, noting specifically that longtime critic [http://www.microsoft.com] of videogames, not using this against the industry if he felt there was merit to it.

Tomich also criticizes the "One Laptop Per Child [http://laptop.org/]" program, Oprah Winfrey's school in Africa (which allows young children to color) and an apparent conspiracy in the videogame industry to mask the fact that it's hiring engineers from other countries not because of lower labor costs and a deeper talent pool but because American engineering graduates have deformed fingers from playing videogames and are thus less productive than they need to be. Even if Tomich does have a valid point about repetitive stress damage to young hands, his conspiracy theory intensity makes it very difficult to take it - or him - seriously.

via: Gizmodo [http://i.gizmodo.com/5189474/researcher-blames-olpc-video-games-and-crayons-for-deforming-innocent-hands]


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SenseOfTumour

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Jul 11, 2008
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I'm gonna leap in early and just say...

Too much anything is too much.

Whether it's video games or colouring or reading or drinking water or anything, too much by its very nature is a bad thing.

As ever, disappointing but unsurprising to see a media piece basically trying to blame gaming for something that, if true, is caused by a child moving.

Surely kids either have to move, or not. Moderation in all things, that's the answer to just about every scare story ever written.
 

Hobo Of Hell

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Jul 2, 2008
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Well if this is true my hands are screwed.
But his later claims just seem stupid, the government covering up the health issues and foriegn engineers required due to said health issues pfft. He completely destroyed the integrity his original claim by going off on his conspiracy tangent.
 

fix-the-spade

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Feb 25, 2008
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He knows that the shape of hands is not uniform between different human beings right?

The arthritis argument seems pretty credible, shames it's coming from a man who sounds like he doesn't believe in the Moon Landings.
I'd love to know what he'd make of my hands, especially whether he thought their mangled shape was down to gaming or breaking nine out of ten in one go...

#Edit, been to his article/web page and that guy needs to read basic anatomy. He's working on the assumption that normal fingers shold be perfectly straight, total... bloody... moron.
 

HobbesMkii

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Jun 7, 2008
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It's probably better if you let your kid sit in an oxygen-filled growth tanks while giving them an IV of all the essential vitamins they'll need until they're 13. That way, they'll be the perfect human beings!

There are a lot of things that could help screw up your hands in very similar ways to what he's describing: Musical instruments, pencils/pens, knitting. Basically, anything you do repetitively has some effect on the way your hands are formed. I wouldn't trust a guy who worked as QA for auto companies and the DOD to run an accurate study. I would trust a bunch of PhDs in children's medicine from the Ivy Leagues.
 

Brotherofwill

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Jan 25, 2009
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I can't help but kind of believe it. He does sound credible and there might very well be some meat to the deforming hands.

He won't stop me from giving crayons to my children, though. Facist :p
 

ryukage_sama

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Mar 12, 2009
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I have "deformities" in my non-gaming fingers. Both of my ring fingers are bent, but I didn't have any need for them while playing my NES or gameboy. It must be from Nerf and playing sports as a soft-boned human.
 

Mrsoupcup

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Jan 13, 2009
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Well this is great another person determind to stop the video game industry. Of course thats like trying to get rid of internet porn, never ever going to happen.
 

chimmers

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Nov 18, 2007
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Wait, if by 'young' children he means the same under fives that he mentions in the crayon argument, then surely excessive game use isn't really a problem. I mean, at that age children shouldn't be playing video games every day in the same way they aren't meant to be watching lots of television..
 

GRoXERs

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Feb 4, 2009
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My little toes are sideways (i.e. the nail is on the outside, when I curl my toes they go under my other toes).
Does this mean I've been playing too many video games with my feet?
No.
It means this man is an idiot. The pictures he has show that humans have variable bone structure, and that's it.
 
Nov 5, 2007
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Well, it's not that far fetched for the hands part but the whole government conspiracy thing is a bit far out. The only thing weird about my hands is that they are hairy :(
 

L.B. Jeffries

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Nov 29, 2007
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The game industry is using their political muscle to keep this from getting out to the world? Hold on a second...is he talking about the E.S.A.? The people who can't even get together a full million for lobbying in DC? Is there some other shadow organization I don't know about?

And if there is, why the hell are they wasting their time with this stuff?