Yorkshire Post

Not tonight Josephine ... I’m tweeting

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A THIRD of people in a relationsh­ip say they have suffered “screen snubbing” from their partners being distracted by their mobile phone use, according to a survey.

And the problem, a bigger issue for millennial­s than older people, could be causing marriage and relationsh­ip breakdown, according to divorce lawyers.

More than a third of people (36 per cent) in a relationsh­ip surveyed said they or their partners had been distracted due to their mobile phone usage, rising to 57 per cent for millennial­s aged between 25 and 34. Eleven per cent of millennial­s, confessed to being “disloyal” on their phones, according to the poll of 2,000 UK adults by YouGov.

Amanda Rimmer, a partner and family law expert at Stephenson­s Solicitors LLP who commission­ed the poll, said: “Some couples now spend more time in bed with their mobile phone than being affectiona­te with each other.

“People sleep with their phone, eat with it, play with it and talk to it – it’s almost a relationsh­ip itself. Mobile phones can build mistrust, doubt and suspicion, cause arguments and infidelity.”

Figures from Ofcom suggest 78 per cent of adults now own a mobile phone, with adults checking on their phones, on average, every 12 minutes during the day. The poll sample size was 2,054 adults, of which 1,328 were in a relationsh­ip.

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