Cross-sectional associations between the screen-time of parents and young children: differences by parent and child gender and day of the week

Russell Jago, Janice L Thompson, Simon J Sebire, Lesley Wood, Laura Pool, Jesmond Zahra, Deborah A Lawlor

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82 Citations (Scopus)
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Abstract

Background
Greater time spent screen-viewing (SV) has been linked to adverse health outcomes. The aim of this study was to examine whether parental SV time is associated with child SV time on week and weekend days.

Methods
Cross-sectional survey of 1078 children aged 5–6 and at least 1 parent. Child and parent SV was reported for weekday and weekend days. Logistic regression examined whether parental SV time was associated with child SV time, with separate analyses for mothers and fathers and interaction terms for child gender.

Results
12% of boys, 8% of girls and 30% of mothers and fathers watched ≥2 hours of TV each weekday. On a weekend day, 45% of boys, 43% of girls, 53% of mothers and 57% of fathers spent ≥2 hours watching TV. Where parents exceeded 2 hours TV-watching per weekday, children were 3.4 times more likely to spend ≥ 2 hours TV-watching if their father exceeded the threshold with odds of 3.7 for mothers. At weekends, daughters of fathers who exceeded 2 hours watching TV were over twice as likely as sons to exceed this level. Evidence that parent time spent using computers was associated with child computer use was also strongest between fathers and daughters (vs. sons) (OR 3.5 vs. 1.0, p interaction = 0.027).

Conclusions
Strong associations were observed between parent and child SV and patterns were different for weekdays versus weekend days. Results show that time spent SV for both parents is strongly associated with child SV, highlighting the need for interventions targeting both parents and children.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1-8
Number of pages8
JournalThe International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity
Volume11
Issue number54
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 23 Apr 2014

Keywords

  • Child Gender
  • Game Console
  • Public Health Guidance
  • Specific Standard Deviation
  • Gender Specific Standard Deviation

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