Janette Niiranen, a researcher in the department of public health solutions at the Finnish Institute for Health and Welfare in Helsinki, and colleagues examined the frequency of electronic media use by 699 preschool children.
They analyzed longitudinal associations between media use at age 18 months and psychosocial symptoms at age 5 years. They also looked at whether media use at age 5 years was associated with the presence of psychosocial symptoms at that time.
The study relied on data collected between 2011 and 2017 as part of the Finnish CHILD-SLEEP longitudinal birth cohort study. Parents reported child media use via questionnaires at age 18 months and age 5 years. Researchers measured psychosocial symptoms at age 5 years using two parent-reported questionnaires: Five-to-Fifteen (FTF) and the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ).
At age 5 years, a high amount of total screen time – at least 135 minutes per day, representing the 75th percentile of use – was associated with increased likelihood of attention and concentration difficulties, hyperactivity and impulsivity, emotional internalizing and externalizing symptoms, and conduct problems, the researchers reported. Odds ratios ranged from 1.57 to 2.18. In a model that adjusted for confounding factors, internalizing symptoms was the only symptom significantly associated with screen time (OR, 2.01).
In a longitudinal analysis, increased media use at 18 months was associated with peer problems at age 5 years (OR, 1.59).
Compared with program viewing, electronic game playing at age 5 years appeared to be associated with fewer psychosocial risks, the researchers noted. In an unadjusted model, a high amount of game playing was associated with hyperactivity, whereas program viewing was associated with a broad range of symptoms.
Use of electronic media beyond recommended amounts was common.
“The results of our study show that 95% of preschool aged children exceed the recommended daily e-media use of 1 hour,” the authors wrote.
No causal link
Amy Orben, DPhil, a researcher at Emmanuel College and the MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, University of Cambridge (England) highlighted limitations of the research.
The study is “purely observational” and does not “establish a causal link between time spent on electronic media and developmental outcomes in small children,” Dr. Orben said. Factors that may influence how much time a child spends on electronic media – such as whether both parents work and where a child lives – may also influence psychosocial symptoms.
“This means that an association can exist even if no causal link is present,” Dr. Orben said. Furthermore, the statistically significant associations found in the study “could well be noise,” she added.
As the study authors note, associations between screen time and children’s psychosocial well-being “may be bidirectional,” commented Karalyn Kinsella, MD, a pediatrician in private practice in Cheshire, Conn.
“There is no way to tell if the families who allow more screen time are doing that because the child already has some psychosocial issues like hyperactivity or dysregulation, and they are using media to calm them,” Dr. Kinsella said. “Or perhaps parents do not have the ability to interact as much with the child due to lack of time/work.” The lack of interaction, rather than electronic media use, may interfere with typical development.
“The end result is still pertinent, as we know children learn through play and social interaction,” Dr. Kinsella added. “I did find it interesting that electronic game playing when played with friends or family was less of a risk.”