Teenagers who spend more time on screens tend to get worse sleep, both in terms of sleep quality and duration, researchers reported Wednesday in the journal PLOS Global Public Health.
And is there a difference between a baby in front of a screen versus a teenager? A recent CDC study found lots of screen time ...
Andy Miles, 48, co-founder of a social networking app, was worried about the effect of social media on his four children ...
Parents aren't heeding the warnings, despite 49% being concerned for their children’s mental health, according to a new ...
Spending hours mindlessly scrolling or consuming content with harmful messages can clearly have a negative impact on mental ...
Rather than limiting the amount of time your teenagers spend watching online content, engage with what they are watching.
In a 2022 Gallup poll, 47 percent of people 50 to 64 and 30 percent of those 65 and up said they spend too much time on their smartphones. Stepping away can be hard, but a new study suggests making ...
Parental concerns about screen ... overall screen time and hope that healthier behavior will take its place, most restriction-based parental controls don’t actually encourage kids to fill ...
I often feel riddled with guilt when he spends time ... to a screen, which Brookman said further proves the addictive quality of this behavior. So how do we cut down on all that time our kids ...
Parents are more likely to read articles about the negative impacts of their children’s screen times than those that document a less consequential effect, NYU researchers found in a February study.
Many parents know that too much screen time is harmful for teenagers and they don't want their kids encountering unhealthy or dangerous content. But figuring out exactly how to provide guardrails to ...
ALSO READ: Is Too Much Screen Time Ruining Our Kids' Eyesight? 9 Questions A Techie Dad Asked An Eye Doctor Researchers from South Korea and Ireland analyzed over 45 studies involving 335,524 ...