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TV Time May May Harm Children
Behavioral problems, obesity more likely in kids who watch 2 hours-plus a day Source: U.S. News & World Report Date: 4/13/09
Researchers have found that, along with significantly increasing the risk of childhood obesity, the likelihood of behavioral problems also goes up when kids watch more than two hours a day of TV.
"Sustained
TV watching has a negative effect on behavior and social skills," said
Carla Weidman, a psychologist in the child development unit at
Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh.
When
children are watching TV, she explained, they're not engaging in other
important activities, such as imaginative play. They're also not
interacting with others to learn social skills and appropriate ways to
resolve conflicts."
"When
TV is used as a babysitter or passive entertainment, that's when it's a
problem," said Dr. Christopher Lucas, director of the early childhood
service at the New York University Child Study Center in New York City.
"But, the reality is that parents can't interact with their children
all the time, and they have a need for a temporary babysitter."
Some parents might take comfort in the idea that television offerings include educational programming.
"There's
a belief that if children are put in front of some educational medium,
that it's somehow a good thing," Lucas said. "But, there's evidence
that the positive effect of educational programming in the absence of
parental interaction is modest."
The
average child today spends 45 hours a week with some form of media,
compared with just 30 hours in school, according to a report from
Common Sense Media. Prepared by researchers from Yale, the U.S.
National Institutes of Health and California Pacific Medical Center,
the report compiled data from 173 studies on children and media and
found that media exposure can contribute to childhood obesity, tobacco
use, drug use, alcohol use, poor school achievement, sexual behavior
and attention problems.
Problems
from media exposure can start at a young age. Johns Hopkins researchers
found that by the time a child is 5;, those who've regularly
watched more than two hours of TV daily are much more likely to exhibit
behavior problems. In fact, aggressive behavior was more than doubled
in youngsters who regularly watched more than two hours of television
daily.
And,
the Hopkins study, which was published in the journal Pediatrics, found
that 20 percent of kids from the 2,702 families studied watched more
than two hours of TV a day. More than 40 percent of the youngsters had
their own TVs in their bedrooms.
"I
recommend removing the TV from the bedroom," Weidman said. Along with
creating sleep problems, she said, parents simply have no control over
what children are watching in their bedrooms, and they're not
monitoring the programming.
"There
are positives, such as educational TV, but you have to use it
judiciously and monitor what the child is watching," she said.
"Remember, you are the parent, and you make the decisions. Don't allow
TV-watching decisions to be driven by the child."
Lucas
agreed. "Try to involve yourself in your kids' media consumption," he
said. "You should be aware of what they're watching, and don't have the
TV on during meals or in the bedrooms."
But,
he said, "don't beat yourself up too much if you plop your kids in
front of a DVD sometimes." It's the constant, repeated exposure that
seems to increase the risk of behavioral problems, he said.
And
one more thing, Lucas suggested: Don't use the TV as background noise.
Even young children, who don't understand the news, can pick up on the
worry it might cause you, he said.
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