Children’s well-being decreases as media use increases
@inproceedings{Freedman2018ChildrensWD, title={Children’s well-being decreases as media use increases}, author={Marian Freedman and Michael G. Burke}, year={2018} }
Compared with their peers who spend no more than 2 hours each weekday exposed to digital media, school-aged children who are in front of screens for longer are less likely to be doing well overall, according to their parents. Furthermore, how much digital media exposure (DME) a child gets is inversely related, in a dose-dependent manner, to markers of childhood “flourishing.”
No Paper Link Available
One Citation
Sounding the Alarm on Sleep: A Negative Association Between Inadequate Sleep and Flourishing.
- MedicineThe Journal of pediatrics
- 2020