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August 6, 2010Stricter Rules Can Steer Kids Away From TV
August 9, 2010This headline is no surprise to long-time readers of this blog. But, despite the recommendations that children (over age two) be exposed to no more than two hours of screen time a day, and the recommendation that children two years of age and younger be exposed to NO TV, a study from Oregon finds that about than 1 in 5 of these very young children are exposed to MORE than the recommended 2 hours a day.
Here’s a report from HealthDay News: A study of 2-year-olds in Oregon finds that almost 20 percent watch more than the recommended two hours of television a day.
“The findings are pretty generalizable to the rest of the country,” said study co-author Dr. John Oh, an epidemic intelligence service officer with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, working with Oregon Public Health.
Experts have warned that too much time in front of the TV could hamper a young child’s mental development and raise the odds for obesity, and the new findings are “what many pediatricians know and have feared,” said Dr. Gwen Wurm, an assistant professor of pediatrics at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine. She was not involved in the study.
According to guidelines from the American Academy of Pediatrics, children’s TV time should be limited to no more than one or two hours a day of “quality programming,” and TV sets should be kept out of their bedrooms.
However, Wurm said, “we know that many, many children are watching too much television. When TV becomes a major part of a child’s life, there’s a problem.”
“That goes for anything that involves screen time,” including computers and video games, she added. “Anything that involves a screen is really where the problem is at.”
The study was published in the CDC’s journal Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.
In the report, Oh and colleagues used data from the Oregon Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring Survey to determine the TV watching habits of 2-year-olds throughout the state.
They found that on an average day, 19.6 percent of 2-year-olds watched at least two hours of TV. Several factors were associated with the amount of TV these children watched.
For example, about 36 percent of black mothers reported their child watched at least two hours of TV a day, compared with just under 19 percent of white mothers. Also, children who had a TV placed in their room were more likely to watch a lot of TV (about 34 percent) than children without a TV in the room (16.3 percent), according to the report.
Being kept at home throughout the day mattered, too. Almost 23 percent of the children who went on fewer than four outings a week watched at least two hours of TV a day, compared with 14.5 percent of the children who went on frequent outings.
Moreover, children who spent time in a child care center were less likely to watch a lot of TV (7.8 percent) than children who didn’t (about 23 percent) or children who had other types of child care (18.6 percent), the researchers found.
Limiting the amount of TV children watch when very young may help reduce the amount of time they spend on media as they get older, the researchers said.
Right now, the average school-age child spends 4.5 hours watching television each day and 7.5 hours using media overall, a recent Kaiser Family Foundation study found.
“Most parents, probably don’t recognize that watching television in this age group has potential harms,” Oh said.
“There is no scientific evidence that shows that television and video viewing in children of this age has any educational benefit. Instead, there have been several studies that have shown that TV viewing at 2 years of age and younger can have negative impacts on learning, language and attention and it’s also linked to childhood obesity.”
Too much screen time can take a toll on a child’s development, Wurm agreed.
“The more kids are spoken to, the better their language development,” she said.
“When children are engaged in the television, they are not being spoken to by adults. We know that cognitive development is linked to speech development, so children who don’t learn to speak well, those are the kids who will not reach their cognitive potential.”
The problem, Wurm said, is that TV can become a substitute for a “healthy interaction with adults and other humans. Parents often discount what they mean to their child. There is nothing a child likes more than sitting down and doing something with their parent.”
In addition, because images on TV go by at lighting speed, it may be taking a toll on a child’s ability to concentrate and may be partly responsible for the increase in attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) among children, Wurm theorized.
And there’s a potential physical cost of too much media in childhood — obesity, due in part to the kind of foods children see advertised, Wurm said. “They advertise Apple Jacks not apples,” she said.
The solution, according to Wurm, is simple: turn off the TV and spend more time with your kids, and get them outdoors more often.
“The more outside time your children have, the healthier they are going to be,” she said.
So, what’s a parent to do? I’ve written a book with many practical suggestions on helping your child (and family) make more healthful nutrition and activity decisions. The book is SuperSized Kids: How to protect your child from the obesity threat and is currently on sale here in both soft- and hard-cover versions.