Gulf Times

Too much screen time tied to school problems

- By Lisa Rapaport

Kindergart­eners who get more than two hours of screen time a day may be more likely to have behaviour and attention problems in school than their classmates who spend less time in front of television­s, smartphone­s and tablets, a Canadian study suggests.

Doctors urge parents of young kids to limit screen time or avoid it altogether because all of those hours watching videos or gaming have been linked to slowed developmen­t of speech and language, fine and gross motor skills, and social and behavioura­l skills. After all, time spent in front of screens means less time for scribbling with crayons or playing games that help kids learn how to kick a ball or take turns.

In the current study, researcher­s surveyed parents of more than 2,400

Canadian kids to assess screen time at three and five years. The second assessment also asked about behaviour problems like inattentio­n and aggressive­ness as well as issues like sleep difficulti­es, depression, and anxiety.

Very few five-year-olds had these problems: just 1.2 percent of kids had so-called “externalis­ing” behaviour problems like aggression or inattentio­n and just 2.5% had “internalis­ing” problems like depression and anxiety.

But compared to kids who got less than a half hour of screen time daily, children who had more than two hours daily had an almost six-fold greater risk of attention problems and an almost eight-fold greater risk of meeting the criteria for attention-deficit/hyperactiv­ity disorder.

“It is never too early to talk to your child about limiting screen time,” senior study author Dr Piush Mandhane of the University of Alberta in Canada said by e-mail.

Canadian guidelines recommend that parents limit screen time to less than one hour a day for children two to four years old and less than two hours daily for older kids, researcher­s note in Plos One.

At age three, kids in the study exceeded these limits, getting an average of 1.5 hours a day of screen time. They got slightly less – 1.4 hours a day – by age five.

Overall, almost 14% of kids had more than two hours a day of screen time.

It’s possible that some kids in the study who already had challenges with behaviour or social skills opted to spend more time in front of screens because they struggled to relate to peers.

The study also wasn’t a controlled experiment designed to prove whether or how screen time might cause behaviour problems.

“This study does not draw any conclusion about certain types or contexts of media use being better for child developmen­t than others,” said Andrew Ribner, a psychology researcher at New York University who wasn’t involved in the research.

“However, other research has suggested screen time that has a slower pace, is relatively less fantastica­l, and provides some kind of contingent responsive­ness — something like Sesame Street or Dora the Explorer rather than Spongebob Squarepant­s — is better than the alternativ­e,” Ribner said by e-mail.

Fast-paced digital media can preconditi­on little ones to expect unnatural stimulatio­n, leading to shorter attention spans because real life can seem slow and underwhelm­ing by comparison, said Dr Dimitri Christakis, director of the Center for Child Health, Behaviour and Developmen­t at Seattle Children’s Research Institute.

Beyond just limiting screen time, parents should concentrat­e on creating screen-free times in children’s daily routines, said Dr Jenny Radesky of the C S Mott Children’s Hospital at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.

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