Hemorrhoids linked to using smartphones on toilet
ASPartOfMe
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Smartphones can be a pain in the butt when used in the bathroom
A first-of-its-kind study links excessive scrolling on the phone while sitting on the toilet with hemorrhoids.
But, seriously. Sitting on an open bowl offers no support for the pelvic floor. That puts pressure on veins in the rectum, making them swollen and inflamed.
“The longer you sit on the toilet, the worse it is for you,” said Dr. Trisha Pasricha, director of the Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center’s Institute for Gut-Brain Research Institute in Boston. Pasricha is also an author of the study, which was published Wednesday in PLOS One.
And smartphones are designed to keep people fixated for as long as possible. “They’re completely consuming to us in ways that wasn’t happening to the casual bathroom reader in the 80s,” Pasricha said. “They could much more easily put the newspaper down and get up and leave.”
Pasricha and colleagues surveyed 125 adults just before they were about to have a routine colonoscopy to screen for colorectal cancer.
Eighty-three (66%) of the participants admitted to using their phones in the bathroom — mostly to catch up on news of the day and scroll through social media.
Gastroenterologists performing the colonoscopies looked for evidence of inflamed veins, or hemorrhoids. People who said they took their phone into the bathroom were 46% more likely to have hemorrhoids compared to the others.
The risk remained even when researchers accounted for other factors associated with hemorrhoids, including dietary fiber, exercise and constipation or straining while using the toilet.
Hemorrhoids aren’t necessarily dangerous, but they can be bothersome, itchy and even painful. They also bleed sometimes, understandably causing concern and leading to nearly 4 million doctor’s office and emergency department visits a year.
Over time, “pelvic floor dysfunction can also lead to incontinence, worsen constipation and be associated with rectal pain,” said Dr. Reezwana Chowdhury, an inflammatory bowel disorder specialist at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. Chowdhury was not involved with the new research.
What’s more, microscopic particles from urine and feces are sent flying through the air when a toilet is flushed. Taking a phone into the bathroom, Chowdhury said, “is kind of gross.”
Younger patients
In the new study, smartphone users in the bathroom tended to be younger, meaning adults in their 40s and 50s, versus people over age 60.
Dr. Robert Cima, a colorectal surgeon at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, said he’s noticed an uptick in recent years of people coming in with hemorrhoids.
“I am seeing younger, earlier- and middle-aged people having more hemorrhoidal complaints, but I can’t tie it to smartphones,” said Cima, who was not involved with the new study. “Maybe it’s because they’re using smartphones or they have better access to care or they’re not eating appropriately.”
The 5-minute rule
The experts agreed that business on the toilet should take no longer than 5 minutes.
More than 37% of study participants who used a smartphone in the bathroom stayed for longer than that, compared to 7% of people who kept their phones out of the bathroom.
Pasricha and other experts do not advocate for taking a phone into the bathroom. If you absolutely must, set a timer.
“If the magic is not happening within five minutes, it’s not going to happen,” Pasricha said. “Take a breather and try again later.”
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Before smartphones people used to take a book or newspaper with them to read on the toilet and were sometimes a very long time on the toilet.
So I don't think smartphones should take all the blame. ![]()
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Really?? Damn, now I'll have to stop bringing my phone in the bathroom so I can put my fingers all over it while touching my genitals and then proceed to put it down on every surface in the house. I would never have guessed that was a bad idea. ![]()
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lostonearth35
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Have the younglings these days even heard of things called comic books or magazines? We used to read them on the toilet when I was a kid. And no, we didn't use rip out the pages to use as toilet paper.
But I get it, smartphones are horrible and to blame for everything. They are turning the younglings' brains into goo. They're following the most ridiculous and even dangerous TikTok trends because they think they're invincible. If they can still think. At least when I was a kid we were actually reading while in the bathroom.
I've heard that children are the future, which is more frightening than anything Stephen King ever wrote. ![]()
ASPartOfMe
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Books and magazines are online these days. So you can read them on your phone.
I have read on the toilet but it is and has been unusual. I find when I attempt to do that I get distracted by the activity I came there to do. Autistic multitasking issues.
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But I get it, smartphones are horrible and to blame for everything. They are turning the younglings' brains into goo. They're following the most ridiculous and even dangerous TikTok trends because they think they're invincible. If they can still think. At least when I was a kid we were actually reading while in the bathroom.
I've heard that children are the future, which is more frightening than anything Stephen King ever wrote.
I get really angry when I see ageism like this, even though it's not entirely unjustified. I certainly won't deny that there are a lot of problems with my generation, but there's a lot of good things too. I see an enthusiasm for fighting to fix the world's problems in zoomers that's much rarer in older generations. My peers are far more accepting (not always of me, but at least in general) than any older people I've ever met. It's not our fault that we were raised by the internet, but given our unfortunate situation I think we've done a great job coming out of it. Ageism against the younger generation has been happening as long as humans have existed. This time there may be some truth to it, but it still suffers from the same problem of refusing to acknowledge all the good parts. It was our parents' and grandparents' generations that f**ked up the world so badly, and there's no generation I would trust the future to more than the zoomers. If a 20yo orange psychopath had been elected president, then I would be worried.
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nick007
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I don't think activities like texting, email, & web browsing are causing the younger generation to stay longer in the bathroom than reading a newspaper would for the older generation. However people using smart phones might stay a lot longer if they are watching vids or recording vids or taking lots of pictures. People can do the former activities most anywhere but they want more privacy for the latter ones, at least privacy offline from their family & housemates & the bathroom is the room people tend to have the most privacy in. Yes I went there but that behavior is a much more disturbing & worrisome trend.
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Last edited by nick007 on 09 Sep 2025, 6:14 pm, edited 1 time in total.
I remember when I was a kid a boy I knew took his Gameboy into the bathroom with him and he was in there for so long that his legs fell asleep for sitting on the toilet too long, then when he stood up he fell over and hit his head on the edge of the bathtub. Don't worry, he survived.
This was long before iPhones were invented.
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I have read on the toilet but it is and has been unusual. I find when I attempt to do that I get distracted by the activity I came there to do. Autistic multitasking issues.
I have difficulty walking and chewing gum at the same time, too.
kokopelli
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So I don't think smartphones should take all the blame.
I keep puzzle books by the crapper.
One of my favorite types is books of cryptograms. I have lost count of how many of those books I worked through while sitting on the crapper.
