Too Much TV May Hamper Kids' Attention
Study: Children Who Watch Excessive TV May Be More Likely To Have Attention Problems As Teens
-
(AP / CBS)
-
Quiz Health Myths Quiz What do you REALLY know about about flu shots, arthritic pain, nightcaps, antiperspirants, and healing cuts?
That news appears in September's edition of the journal Pediatrics.
The finding comes from a study of more than 1,000 children born and raised in New Zealand. First, psychologists tested and rated the children's attention at age 3 and 5 years. When the kids were 5-11 years old, their parents reported how much TV the children watched on weekdays. When the kids were 13 and 15, they reported their own weekday TV time.
On average, the kids watched about two hours of TV per weekday from ages 5-11, and they watched an extra hour of weekday TV as teens. Any adolescent attention problems were noted by the teens themselves, as well as their parents and teachers.
Watching more than the average amount of TV, in childhood or adolescence, was linked to teen attention problems, regardless of attention problems in early childhood. The study doesn't prove that TV wrecks children's attention.
The researchers - who included Carl Erik Landhuis, B.A., and Robert John
Hancox, Ph.D., of New Zealand's University of Otago - couldn't control for all possible influences on the children's attention. But Landhuis, Hancox, and colleagues note two theories about TV and children's attention.
"One explanation targets brain development in early childhood," write the researchers. That is, that watching television influences children's brain development.
"Another explanation is that life as it is portrayed on television, with its fast-paced editing and attention-grabbing techniques, makes reality seem boring by comparison," the researchers write. "Hence, children who watch a lot of television may become less tolerant of slower-paced and more mundane tasks, such as school work."
The study doesn't show what types of programs the kids watched, so it's not clear whether TV shows' content makes a difference. The data also doesn't cover kids' TV time before age 5.
The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), which publishes the journal Pediatrics, recommends that children younger than 2 get no "screen time," which includes TV and videos. The AAP also advises limiting older kids to no more than two hours of quality TV and videos per day.
By Miranda Hitti
Reviewed by Louise Chang, M.D.
©2007 WebMD, Inc. All rights reserved.
- Groucho Marx once said: "I find television very educational. Every time someone turns it on I go to the library and read a book."
- Reply to this comment
- I would think this would apply to computers also. My 9-year-old granddaughter and her friends are very much involved in the Webkinz web site, which I find entertains as well as educates them. However, like the other computer programs she uses, it can be fast-paced and fun; which homework isn''t. She absolutely hates the quiet time of doing homework. My 5-year-old granddaughter goes into a trance when watching TV. You have to actually shut it off to get her to hear what you''re saying to her. Not good. . . .
- Reply to this comment
Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."




