Pediatricians Urged to Pull Plug on Entertainment
Tracking kids' TV and video game time should be priority.
Oct. 16, 2010— -- The American Academy of Pediatrics says it is time for pediatricians to include the monitoring of kids' use of TV, video games, and other entertainment media as a "high priority."
Pediatricians should ask at every well-child visit how much a child or adolescent is viewing per day and whether a TV or Internet access is in the bedroom, Dr. Victor C. Strasburger, of the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, and colleagues on the AAP committee recommended.
Parents need to be encouraged to educate their children about ways to critically evaluate the content of what they're watching. Moreover, parents should take the lead in encouraging children to spend time in nonvideo, nonsedentary activities, they added.
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Schools, too, need to get involved by working media education into curriculum, the AAP guidelines proposed.
"The simplest way to do this would be to incorporate principles of media education into existing programs on drug prevention and sex education," Strasburger's group wrote in the guidelines.
Media -- whether TV, movies, books, music, the Internet, or video and computer games -- should be recognized as potential health risks, they noted.
Kids and teens spend more time on these activities than anything else aside from sleep. More than 70 percent of American teens have a TV in their bedrooms, half have a video game console, and one-third have a computer with Internet access there.
The problem is that time spent on these activities often displaces more creative, active, or social activities, Strasburger's group warned. A higher level of TV use has been linked to obesity and poorer school performance.
And significant exposure to violence in the media increases the risk of aggressive behavior, desensitizes kids, and "makes them believe the world is a 'meaner and scarier' place than it is," they wrote in the guidelines.
Highly sexualized TV programs and advertising are common as well. But text messaging and online social networks also often get used for sexual or pornographic purposes.