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Screen Time May Take a Toll on Kids' Relationships

2010-03-03 05:12:16

Tue Mar 2, 11:49 pm ET

TUESDAY, March 2 (HealthDay News) -- Too much time in front of computers or

televisions increases the likelihood that teens will have poor relationships

with their parents and peers, a new study suggests.

The researchers looked at 3,043 New Zealand teens, aged 14 to 15, who provided

details about how they spent their free time and how close they were with other

people.

The more time the teens spent watching TV or using a computer, the more likely

they were to report having difficulty forming a relationship with or an

emotional bond to their parents. The likelihood of having what the researchers

called "low attachment" to parents increased 4 percent for every hour spent

watching TV and 5 percent for every hour spent using a computer.

Teens who spent more time doing homework or reading had a higher level of

attachment to their parents, the study authors noted in their report published

in the March issue of the Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine.

The researchers at the University of Otago in Dunedin also analyzed interview

responses collected from 976 kids, aged 15, in 1987 and 1988. For every

additional hour of TV that they watched, the teens had a 13 percent increased

risk of low attachment to their parents and a 24 percent increased risk of low

attachment to peers.

There are a number of possible reasons why too much screen time may affect

teens' relationships with family and peers, the study authors noted. For

example, teens who have TVs in their bedroom spend more time watching TV and

may share fewer meals with their family.

"However, it is also possible that adolescents with poor attachment

relationships with immediate friends and family use screen-based activities to

facilitate new attachment figures such as online friendships or parasocial

relationships with television characters or personalities," wrote Rosalina

Richards and colleagues.

"Given the importance of attachment to parents and peers in adolescent health

and development, concern about high levels of screen time among adolescents is

warranted," the researchers concluded. "With the rapid advance of screen-based

options for entertainment, communication and education, ongoing research is

needed to monitor the effect that these technologies have on social development

and psychological and physical well-being among adolescents."