We live in an age where screens are inescapable. Office work, online classes, social media scrolling, the average person now spends hours in front of laptops, phones, and tablets every day. But for the 537 million adults worldwide living with diabetes, those hours may carry hidden costs that go far beyond tired eyes and tension headaches. The problem isn't about being online itself. It's about what happens to your body when you're sitting still, staring at a glowing rectangle, for the better part of your day."A stricter screen time would prove to regulate and not avoid technology entirely, it helps in preventing a sedentary lifestyle which can directly affect an individual's blood sugar control, weight, sleep quality along with long term complications," says Dr. Ravikiran Muthuswamy, Senior Consultant in Endocrinology at SIMS Hospital, Chennai. "Physical inactivity has become one of the biggest concerns with prolonged screen time. This reduces the calorie expenditure and decreases insulin sensitivity, making it hard for the body to balance the glucose levels effectively."Inactivity and blue light are the main culpritsThe mechanism is straightforward. When you're sitting in front of a screen for hours, your body isn't moving, burning calories, or using glucose efficiently. But it gets worse. "When individuals sit with screens for a long period of time, they often snack excessively, also known as mindless eating," Dr. Muthuswamy explained. "This leads to a spike in uncontrolled blood sugar levels as well as weight gain." You're not even aware you're eating. The hand goes to the snack, the mouth works automatically, and suddenly you've consumed 500 calories of junk food without registering it.The blue light emitted from screens is another culprit. Unlike natural light, screen light interferes with the body's production of melatonin, the hormone that signals sleep time. For diabetics, poor sleep is metabolically damaging. "Late night screen usage also tends to disrupt sleep patterns but affecting the melatonin production. Hence, poor sleep itself becomes strongly linked to insulin resistance and imbalance in glucose levels," the doctor said.Medical research has begun quantifying these risks. According to Dr. Srinivasa Naick, Consultant Ophthalmologist at Dr Agarwal's Eye Hospital in Karnataka, "Blue light disturbs sleep, delays melatonin production and alters hormone balance which can lead to higher fasting glucose levels." He adds that prolonged screen usage of more than three hours may increase blood pressure due to altered cortisol levels and contribute to higher cholesterol levels. Recent Mendelian randomization studies suggest that excessive leisure screen time may also increase the risk of diabetic retinopathy, the microvascular complication that can eventually lead to blindness.But the evidence goes deeper. A landmark study published in the Diabetes, Obesity and Metabolism found that participants who spent more than five hours daily on screens had a 26 percent higher risk of developing Type 2 diabetes compared to those who limited screen time to under an hour. The researchers noted that the combination of sedentary behavior, disrupted sleep patterns, and increased snacking created a perfect storm for metabolic dysfunction. Even more concerning, the study showed that among those already diagnosed with diabetes, excessive screen time was strongly associated with poor glycemic control and higher HbA1c levels—the measure of average blood sugar over three months.Dr. K Baraneedharan, Senior Consultant Diabetologist at Kauvery Hospital in Chennai, emphasizes that the effects are real and observable in his daily practice. "Diabetes is treated mainly with the help of living a healthy lifestyle involving exercise, sleep, controlling stress, and proper nutrition. Excessive use of electronic devices affects all these aspects. Staying glued to the monitor for many hours makes one live a sedentary life which results in poor sensitivity to insulin and inefficient glucose metabolism," he explained. He's not theoretical about this. He sees patients regularly whose diabetes management deteriorates when their screen time increases, and improves when they implement boundaries.Warning signsThe warning signs are there if you know what to look for. Worsening blood sugar readings despite taking medication, unexplained weight gain, headaches, eye strain, and even numbness or tingling from poor circulation can all signal that screen time has spiraled into a problem. For those already at risk of diabetic retinopathy—the diabetes-related eye condition that damages blood vessels in the retina—hours on a device means dry eyes, blurry vision, and compounding eye fatigue. It's not that screens directly cause retinopathy, but the sedentary behavior and poor sleep they encourage make the existing condition worse.But this doesn't mean abandoning screens entirely, which would be neither realistic nor necessary"Screen time need not be avoided; rather diabetic individuals can take movement breaks every 30-45 minutes, avoid screen time before bed," Dr. Muthuswamy said. "Simple activities such as walking or stretching in between work sessions help a lot." The key is interrupting the sedentary stretch. Even two minutes of movement every half hour breaks the metabolic stagnation that comes from staying still.More specific guidance comes from ophthalmologists and endocrinologists together. Dr. Naick recommends limiting screen time to around two hours per day, taking breaks every 30 minutes to move and stretch, and following the 10-10-10 rule—walking for 10 minutes after breakfast, lunch, and dinner to reduce post-meal glucose spikes. That simple intervention alone can prevent the sharp blood sugar spikes that damage blood vessels over time. Equally important: shutting down gadgets at least two hours before sleep. "Shut down gadgets at least two hours before sleep to protect circadian rhythm, improve sleep quality and maintain stable fasting blood glucose levels," he said.The practical reality is that for many people, especially those working from home or studying online, cutting screen time to two hours sounds impossible. But the goal isn't perfection. It's awareness and intentionality. If your work requires eight hours in front of a screen, the solution isn't to eliminate screens. It's to reclaim the margins. Take the walk. Skip the mindless scrolling before bed. Stand up every half hour. These micro-changes compound over time.The reality is that stricter screen time awareness isn't about rejecting technology or returning to a pre-digital world. It's about being intentional, especially if you have diabetes. For people managing this condition, the stakes are higher than most. The hours you spend in front of a screen today can quietly compound into elevated blood sugar, weight gain, sleep disruption, and long-term complications tomorrow. Technology isn't going anywhere, but how you use it absolutely matters.Medical experts consulted This article includes expert inputs shared with TOI Health by:Dr. Ravikiran Muthuswamy, Senior Consultant in Endocrinology at SIMS Hospital, ChennaiDr. Srinivasa Naick, Consultant Ophthalmologist at Dr Agarwal's Eye Hospital, KarnatakaDr. K Baraneedharan, Senior Consultant Diabetologist at Kauvery Hospital, ChennaiInputs were used to explain how screen time triggers diabetes risk and why there should be a limit on the usage of electronic devices.