| Literature DB >> 32825541 |
Allison Kiefner-Burmeister1, Sarah Domoff2, Jenny Radesky3.
Abstract
Caregiver mobile phone use while monitoring children is a behavior of increasing prevalence. Family mealtimes have long been considered a time in which parents and children connect emotionally and model eating behaviors, but prior studies have documented less parent-child conversation and more negative parent reactions to child behavioral bids at the table during parent phone use. Research on this topic to date is sparse and focuses only on US populations. The current study used non-participant naturalistic observation to record data on parental mealtime device use and family interactions while dining with children in a fast food restaurant in Italy. Thirty seven families (individuals observed = 129) were observed at a restaurant for the duration of their meal. Qualitative analysis of field notes indicated that mobile phones are frequently used by caregivers during feeding interactions. A novel observation in the current study was different patterns of use by parent gender and age. Mothers appeared to divide their attention between phone and child, whereas fathers evidenced more continuous mobile phone use during which there was lower responsiveness towards children during the meal. Younger parents more frequently used mobile phones, compared to older parents. Parents who missed child bids for attention were all phone users during the mealtime.Entities:
Keywords: family mealtime; parental device use; parental internet use; phone use
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32825541 PMCID: PMC7504203 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17176077
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Family demographic and phone use information.
| Any Parent | Any Parent | Continuous Use | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phone Use | ||||
|
| ||||
| Female | 41 (61%) | 13 (32%) | 10 (77%) | 3 (23%) |
| Male | 26 (39%) | 11 (42%) | 6 (55%) | 5 (45%) |
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| 20–39 | 31 (46%) | 18 (58%) | 12 (67%) | 6 (33%) |
| 40–59 | 32 (48%) | 5 (16%) | 3 (60%) | 2 (40%) |
| 60+ | 4 (6%) | 1 (25%) | 1 (100%) | 0 (0%) |
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| Italian | 11 (30%) | 5 (46%) | ||
| Other European Origin | 8 (22%) | 6 (63%) | ||
| Asian Origin | 2 (5%) | 1 (50%) | ||
| Inaudible/Unidentifiable | 16 (43%) | 6 (50%) | ||
|
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| Female | 34 (54%) | 17 (50%) | ||
| Male | 29 (46%) | 12 (41%) | ||
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| Infant (Under 1 year) | 4 (50%) | 3 (75%) | ||
| Toddler (1–3 years) | 2 (23%) | 2 (100%) | ||
| Preschool (3–5 years) | 9 (50%) | 8 (89%) | ||
| School Age (5–11 years) | 40 (23%) | 16 (33%) | ||
| Teenage (12–18 years) | 7 (50%) | 0 (0%) |
Note: Families with at least one child 0–11 years were observed. In the instance that teenage siblings accompanied school age children, the teens were observed as well.
Type of parental phone use by youngest child in family.
| Infant | Toddler | Preschooler | School Age | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| Brief/Intermittent | 0 | 0 | 2 | 4 |
| Frequent/Continuous | 2 | 0 | 3 | 0 |
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| Brief/Intermittent | 2 | 2 | 2 | 4 |
| Frequent/Continuous | 0 | 0 | 3 | 0 |
Note: While 43% of observed families had multiple children, this table examines parental phone use type by only the youngest child in each family. All phone using adults are included in this table, but only the youngest or only child in each family is represented.
Child bids for attention.
| Phone Using Parent | Non-Phone Using Parent | |
|---|---|---|
| Child Bid for Attention | 10 (45%) | 1 (7%) |
| Missed Bid for Attention | 5 (50%) | 0 (0%) |
Note: Both intermittent and continuous phone-using parents are categorized as.phone using parents in this table. Percentage of child bids for attention denotes percentage of families in phone using category (user or non-user) who had a child bid for attention at least once. Percentage of missed bid for attention denotes the percentage of missed bids for attention in each phone using category.