| Literature DB >> 34081606 |
Amber J Hammons1, Elizabeth Villegas2, Ryan Robart1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Child screen time (ST) has soared during the COVID-19 pandemic as lockdowns and restrictions have forced changes to regular family routines. It is important to investigate how families are navigating ST.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; children; experiences; family; outcomes; pandemic; parenting; parents; screen time
Year: 2021 PMID: 34081606 PMCID: PMC8189286 DOI: 10.2196/29411
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Pediatr Parent ISSN: 2561-6722
Demographic characteristics of the parents included in this study (N=48).
| Characteristics | Values | ||
| Parent age (years), median (IQR) | 37.5 (32.0-43.8) | ||
| Child age (years), median (IQR) | 11.5 (7-15) | ||
| Children per family, median (IQR) | 2.5 (2-4) | ||
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| Employed | 18 (38) | |
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| Working remotely | 9 (19) | |
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| Less than high school | 14 (29) | |
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| High school | 14 (29) | |
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| Technical school | 4 (8) | |
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| Professional degree | 2 (4) | |
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| Bachelor’s degree | 5 (10) | |
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| Master’s degree | 7 (15) | |
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| Declined to respond | 2 (4) | |
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| ≤19,999 | 13 (27) | |
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| 20,000-29,999 | 5 (10) | |
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| 30,000-39,999 | 6 (13) | |
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| 40,000-49,999 | 5 (10) | |
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| 50,000-59,999 | 3 (6) | |
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| 60,000-69,999 | 3 (6) | |
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| 70,000-79,999 | 2 (4) | |
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| 80,000-89,999 | 1 (2) | |
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| 90,000-99,999 | 1 (2) | |
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| ≥100,000 | 8 (17) | |
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| Declined to respond | 1 (2) | |
Themes and representative quotes.
| Themes | Quoted responses |
| Theme 1. Total STa has increased |
“Oh, good God, I would have to say that with me, I feel like my kids are on the computer all the time.” [Participant #1, mother] “So, I mean, they’re on it, except for dinnertime, they are on the computer.” [Participant #4, mother] “So, screen time has exponentially increased in the pandemic.” [Participant #16, mother] |
| Theme 2. Children are too attached to their screens |
“All day long, since dawn my daughters are already watching TV, they are with the iPad in hand or with the phone and it is practically all day. If they go out to play, it is for very little, and it is because I have to be behind them, ‘leave me the phone, turn off the TV’. I go and I turn them off. If it was up to them, all day long they will be using their phone or TV.” [Participant #29, mother] “It’s like they want to be there all the time so I literally have to remove the device, put them away where they can’t get them so they can go do something else. So, they definitely struggle with just kind of wanting to do that all the time.” [Participant #14, mother] “Mine too, since the pandemic started. Classes on the computer, the phone, the games...the little girl who is 7 is addicted to the telephone. She has made it difficult to take it away because we don’t go outside much. Yes, even me, because I have a part-time job. Since everything is on social networks, we spend more time on the phone. My husband is the only one not so much on the phone because he has to work. When he arrives [home] he is on his phone.” [Participant #38, mother] “I’ve noticed my kids have that addictiveness too. When they get in trouble, that’s the thing, we take away from them and it’s almost like you are taking, I hate to say it, like drugs away from a drug addict, they just get so upset and so emotional and it’s just, it’s the end of the world for them. I, I don’t like that at all, so it’s kind of like, what are we going to do, it’s because of the situation that we are in, darned if you do, darned if you don’t situation, because they need it for school and they need it for social interactions like, so I feel you almost have no choice in this situation.” [Participant #13, mother] |
| Theme 3. ST has advantages and disadvantages, but parents perceive ST as mostly negative |
“I think the good thing that we've noticed is that both of these kids have become extremely knowledgeable on technology. And so, for that, I would say that's a positive. I can tell you that at four years old, I would not have been able to do the things that they do on technology. But I think that it's good that they're learning these skills and things as young as they are. I just want to make sure that it doesn't continue to be their entire worlds. And they still get those opportunities to do the kids things like go outside and play, and imagine, and get creative outside of technology too.” [Participant #19, mother] “Well, I don’t like the amount of screen time, I don’t think it’s a positive thing overall. That being said, it’s been a way for her to connect with people, with friends and that’s been good for her mental health to have that connection, and that’s why I’ve allowed her to be on her screen a lot more than I normally would, because of the connection aspect. It’s been, it’s been negative in the way of her… almost being addicted to her device, and so there has been struggle at times when I ask for the device back before bed times, and different times if I want her to focus on her homework and she’s not quite ready, however it might be, she will get, she will become challenging with me and not want to give it up so that’s created some struggle for sure during all of this time. So yeah, but it’s definitely changed and I don’t like the amount of time she’s on it, but I allow it based on the situation that we’re in.” [Participant #11, mother] “I would definitely say for our household it's been a negative just because I've noticed…more so, I mean, like they're just fatigued easier. They're more irritable across the board with each other. But I think it's, almost turning into like an addiction. Like my 10-year-old has a really hard time giving up his games. Like, OK, it's time to put it down, like, and there's definitely more fights and definitely more angst in me. Now we have that. ‘Just let me finish this game’. ‘Let me finish this game’. You know, or like my daughter who doesn't create problems but can retreat into her room and just sit and watch, like binge watch TV shows, you know. And so, I would say it's been negative for us just all the way across the board.” [Participant #16, mother] |
| Theme 4. Parents and children have limited options |
“Well, I would honestly not like that much time [screen time] but then I say, well what else can they do? Sometimes I ask them to read and they just read a little and so on, or we go walk the dogs at night, but nothing else.” [Participant #31, mother] “Like [other participant] said, I wish we can take back time, but how things are right now, we do not have a lot to replace it with. Because the sibling that is closest with him in age is 16, 7 years apart, it makes it really challenging for the both of them. She is a good sport and can be but it is really hard. Yeah, I wish it could be different but the circumstances are how they are, just like me drinking a glass every single night is not the greatest thing. That is not for me to change my actions right now because we are in the thick of it. That is kind of where I feel like my youngest is with his screen time and we try to help him and take him off of it. We watch movies together, but there is only so much you can do. There are no alternatives that can be presented to him, I do not have a lot of things to threaten him with. Options are limited.” [Participant #6, mother] “I mean, like I said, he [dad] has really created a schedule for them. And so, he does a good job about saying, ‘nope, right now is a no technology time. Shut it off. Go play together’, or ‘this is outside time’. And so, he's put that together. But there are some days that that doesn't work for his work schedule and he has a meeting at that time. And so that becomes a technology time and it's OK to kind of make those adjustments.” [Participant #19, mother] |
| Theme 5. ST restrictions |
“But now that I have noticed it more, that I have lost more control, and she has been more on the T.V., I have tried to set limits. I tell her, ‘No, no, no, that is enough screen time, we are going to play this’. I try to do things with her, well in my case since she is young, I make her do more manual things. I teach her things, like if I am making tortillas, I have her help me. Although she is little, I want her to interact more with me, that we are together, that she interacts more with me than the television.” [Participant #21, mother] “For me I’ve tried to set certain hours for them, they understand for a few days but then they kind of don't care much about what I tell them. First, I used to tell her, ‘you have certain hours to use the phone, computer, television’, whatever they're using, or I'd tell her to turn off the phone in an hour. She just did it in the first few days and then she would forget and grab it again when she wanted.” [Participant #29, mother] “In my point of view, it is more, much more difficult to restrict it. If you tried to control the personal use that they have, obviously it is very difficult because as I mentioned before, my children talk a lot among themselves and they want to do what other children do. This and especially as I mentioned before they are not interested in doing another activity and they are very clever. My oldest child tells me, ‘I do my homework, I behave well at school, I help you do my chores, why not? Why can't I use it?’ So, it is difficult for me to explain to him that he should do something else. So, it is very difficult.” [Participant #47, mother] |
| Subtheme 5.1. Children react negatively when ST is restricted |
“Yes, we have tried [screen time restrictions] but it's super, super difficult. In truth, my family is very, very difficult. I have seven children, one 18, one 17, one 15, one 13, one 8, and a 3-year-old girl and a 6-month-old baby. It has become very, very difficult for me to set rules on this. Because the children, the two oldest, get very rebellious because they want to be playing with the other children. It’s a fight every day, they say, ‘You don’t let us play, we are not going to the park, we’re going to our friends house to play’. I can’t do anything other than to help their whims that they want to be playing on the computer. You just hear the fighting and shouting here in front of the television. ‘Oh no, they killed me’. Very angry. Oh no, it has been very difficult for me.” [Participant #42, mother] “Like, I want him to, you know, play games with friends and bond because he's so isolated. But my problem is that he feels like he has access 24/7, and my rules, he doesn't listen to my rules. And so, he's going in past bedtime and I'm finding his eyes on screens or playing games and stuff. And I have tried every combination I can think of. So now they're restricted. So now he's more isolated. So, it's hard. It's very hard.” [Participant #10, mother] “It has been bad just because if we don't allow them to, if they ask, ‘can I play on the tablet’ or ‘oh, can I play Xbox?’ and we tell them no, they are at such a young age, they can't really comprehend or know how to calm themselves after that. When we say no, they should, they should kind of be able to calm themselves down. As in like not throw a tantrum once, once we say no. And then we try our hardest not to give in. But at times, if we're trying to cook and…they're just crying and just going like everywhere and not focusing on what we're telling them to do, then we'll just be like, ‘OK, go ahead and go on the tablet. It's fine, but it has to be school related’. It has made their attitude a little bit, in a negative way, just because they're craving to have that screen time when normally we would just go outside. They wouldn't want to go outside.” [Participant #5, mother] |
| Theme 6. Parents are concerned that their children are not getting enough exercise |
“And they have gained weight through the pandemic. I attribute it to all those things...the screen time, the being sedentary, the snacking and all of that stuff. And like...my son used to be you know, he would and my daughter, they would have their basketball or they would have their sports practices every day. And so, it's like not having that motivation. Their normal activities. And they're finally hitting this, like, pre-teen where you're getting all these hormones. So, I'm not necessarily worrying so much about my little ones, but I'm, I am very concerned about my older ones just because that can be detrimental going into your teen years and being overweight and struggling with that and like having a whole year of not doing anything and not having all that, and then not necessarily like me being able to motivate them. I mean, they do PE, so they've been doing yoga for their PE classes. They have to. But I mean, like, it's a 30-minute workout video that they do two days a week, which doesn't really give you any benefit. So, I would say, yes, I am very concerned for my own kids.” [Participant #16, mother] “It worries me because before when they went to school they made them exercise at break time, and now they don't do anything.” [Participant #48, mother] “They’re not doing sports, they’re not running around outside with their friends, yeah, I do have concerns.” [Participant #13, mother] |
aST: screen time.