Guidelines also stipulate teenagers should have no more than three hours of screen time a day
Archived version: https://archive.ph/0293p
Guidelines also stipulate teenagers should have no more than three hours of screen time a day
Archived version: https://archive.ph/0293p
“common knowledge” usually means no scientific evidence right?
I really don’t give a fuck what the “common knowledge” about something is. “common knowledge” is that Vitamin C helps when you’re sick and that carrots improve your eyesight.
The reality is neither has any statistically significant impact.
I don’t have kids so I haven’t read up on screen time and it’s effects but if you have scientific studies about this I’d love to see them.
Here you go.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10353947/
Also, here’s a study that found Vitamin C reduces the duration of a cold by an average of 8%.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23440782/
RE: Vitamin C has been found to have very little evidence in other studies. The evidence is mixed at best, against effectiveness at worst.
But it doesn’t make things worse so who really cares? Some people waste their money on useless products.
RE: Screen Time, thanks for that meta analysis. It seems like there is solid evidence for detrimental effects of screen time. It also seems like those effects might be socioeconomically correlated but I haven’t gone through all the cited sources to check if they controlled for status.
I think this line was the one that particularly made me want to look into the articles. If screen time is serving as a proxy for parental engagement then it seems obvious that it would have negative effects, but I’ll need to read the additional articles.
The sources help prove your claim, and have changed my view. Thanks again
Good on you for being opposed to a concept, then taking in the research and adjusting your viewpoint. Not often are people willing - or capable - of this shift in opinion.