It’s Official: To Protect Baby’s Brain, Turn Off TV
- By Brandon Keim
- October 18, 2011
- 6:30 am
A decade ago, the American Academy of Pediatrics suggested that
parents limit TV consumption by children under two years of age. The
recommendations were based as much on common sense as science, because
studies of media consumption and infant development were themselves in
their infancy.
The research has finally grown up. And though it’s still ongoing,
it’s mature enough for the AAP to release a new, science-heavy policy
statement on babies watching television, videos or any other passive
media form.
Their verdict: It’s not good, and probably bad.
Media, whether playing in the background or designed explicitly as an
infant educational tool, “have potentially negative effects and no
known positive effects for children younger than 2 years,” concluded the
AAP’s report, released Oct. 18 at the Academy’s annual meeting in
Boston and scheduled for November publication in the journal Pediatrics.
“Although infant/toddler programming might be entertaining, it should
not be marketed as or presumed by parents to be educational.”
Since the AAP made its original recommendations in 1999, passive
entertainment screens — televisions, DVD players, computers streaming
video — have become ubiquitous, and the average 12-month-old gets
between one and two hours of screen time per day. (Interactive screens,
such as iPads and other tablets, are considered in the new
recommendations.) The 0- to 2-year age group has become a prime target
for commercial educational programming, often used by parents convinced
that it’s beneficial.
As screens proliferated, so did research. “There have been about 50
studies that have come out on media use by children in this age group
between 1999 and now,” said Ari Brown, a pediatrician and member of the AAP committee that wrote the new report.
Those studies have found that children don’t really understand what’s happening on a screen until they’re about 2 years old. Once they do, media can be good for them, but until then television is essentially a mesmerizing, glowing box.
Used at night, TV might help kids fall asleep, but that appears to come at a delayed cost
of subsequent sleep disturbances and irregularities. While the result
of TV-induced sleep problems hasn’t been directly studied, poor sleep in
infants is generally linked to problems with mood, behavior and
learning.
At other times, media consumption comes with opportunity costs, foremost among them the silence of parents. “While television is on, there’s less talking, and talk time is very important in language development,” said Brown.
'The way these kids’ programs came
out was, ‘These are really educational!' Well that’s great, but prove
it. Show me the science.'
Three studies since 1999 have tracked educational television use and language development, and they found a link between increased TV time and developmental delays.
Whether that’s a cause or effect — parents who leave kids in front of
televisions might simply be poor teachers — isn’t clear, nor are the
long-term effects, but the AAP called the findings “concerning.” In the
same vein, there may also be a link to attention problems.
Even when media plays in the background, it distracts babies from play, an activity that is known to have deep developmental benefits.
And for parents who use media to carve out a few precious, necessary
free minutes in busy schedules, Brown recommended letting kids entertain
themselves.
“We know you can’t spend 24 hours a day reading to your child and
playing with them. That’s okay. What’s also okay is your child playing
independently,” she said. “That’s valuable time. They’re
problem-solving. They’re using their imagination, thinking creatively
and entertaining themselves.”
As for iPads and other kid-friendly interactive computing devises,
Brown said research has barely started, much less come to conclusions.
But she counseled skepticism of promotional claims, which have been made
with some of the same zeal as products of now-dubious standing, such as
the controversial Baby Einstein videos.
“The way these kids’ programs came out was, ‘These are really
educational! They’re going to help your kids learn!’ Well that’s great,
but prove it. Show me the science,” Brown said. “I don’t have a problem
with touch screens, and they’re not necessarily bad. But we need to
understand how this affects kids.”
Image: Yoshihide Nomamura/Flickr
Citation: “Media Use by Children Younger Than 2 Years.” By the
American Academy of Pediatrics Council on Communications and Media
Executive Committee. Pediatrics, Vol 128 No. 5, November 2011.
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