64% of adults now have device-related neck pain. Here's what's actually happening to your spine — and how to reverse it.
"Tech neck" isn't a buzzword. It's a biomechanical reality — and it's accelerating. COVID-19 pushed screen time to record levels. Remote work locked millions of people into postures their spines were never designed to sustain for hours at a time. A 2025 national survey now finds 64% of the population experiencing device-related neck pain, with women (68%) and people aged 31–40 hit hardest.
The clinical term is forward head posture (FHP) or cervical kyphosis: your head migrates forward of your shoulders, the natural inward curve of your neck flattens or reverses, and a cascade of compressive and tensile forces ripples down through your thoracic spine, your shoulders, your jaw — even your lungs.
As a chiropractor practicing in San Diego's La Jolla corridor, I see this in my office every single day — from surfers and UCSD researchers with daily headaches to Mission Valley desk workers whose arm has been numb for six months. The good news: the research has never been clearer on how to fix it.
Effective gravitational load on the cervical spine by forward head angle — based on Kapandji cantilever biomechanics (biomechanical estimate, not experimentally measured)
Multiple independent studies from 2024–2025 converge on a troubling picture. This isn't a niche occupational health problem. It's the most common musculoskeletal issue of the smartphone era — and San Diego's active, screen-heavy population is squarely in the crosshairs.
The research is clear: patients who only get pain relief regress to baseline within 12 months. Those who complete structural correction — including cervical traction — maintain results at 1.5 years.
The single best-supported exercise for forward head posture. Lying on your back, gently nod your chin toward your chest as if making a double chin, flattening your neck against the surface. Activates the deep cervical flexors (longus colli, longus capitis) while simultaneously stretching the suboccipital muscles driving the FHP.
The most targeted deep cervical flexor exercise. In supine, with a small rolled towel under the neck, perform tiny head nods activating at 22–28 mmHg. This isolates the deep layer without recruiting the superficial SCM. Research shows DCF training outperforms conventional isometric training for FHP correction in workers with chronic neck pain.
Chin tucks alone address the neck — but the pec minor draws the entire shoulder girdle forward, keeping FHP entrenched. Stand in a doorway, forearm on the frame at 90°, gently rotate your chest away. Then perform 10 scapular retractions. Combined chin tuck + scapular correction produces significantly greater postural correction than chin tucks alone.
Only 37.5% of smartphone users hold their phone at eye level — and this group has the lowest neck pain prevalence in every study. Users who bend their neck down are 24% more likely to develop neck pain. Raise the phone, not lower the head. Set a movement alarm every 20–30 minutes.
If you've been living with neck pain, headaches, or that nagging shoulder tension — and your screens haven't gotten any smaller — it's time for a structural evaluation. Serving La Jolla, Torrey Pines, Sorrento Valley, Mission Valley, UTC, and the wider San Diego area.