Department of Psychology, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Alberta Children's Hospital Research Institute, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
JAMA Pediatr. 2022 Apr 1;176(4):373-383. doi: 10.1001/jamapediatrics.2021.6386.
Pediatric guidelines suggest that infants younger than 2 years avoid screen time altogether, while children aged 2 to 5 years receive no more than 1 hour per day. Although these guidelines have been adopted around the world, substantial variability exists in adherence to the guidelines, and precise estimates are needed to inform public health and policy initiatives.
To derive the pooled prevalence via meta-analytic methods of children younger than 2 years and children aged 2 to 5 years who are meeting guidelines about screen time.
Searches were conducted in MEDLINE, PsycINFO, and Embase up to March 2020.
Studies were included if participants were 5 years and younger and the prevalence of meeting (or exceeding) screen time guidelines was reported.
Data extraction followed Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses (PRISMA) guidelines. Two independent reviewers extracted all relevant data. Random-effects meta-analyses were used to derive the mean prevalence rates.
Prevalence of meeting screen time guidelines.
From 63 studies, 95 nonoverlapping samples with a total of 89 163 participants were included. For children younger than 2 years, the pooled prevalence of meeting the screen time guideline (0 h/d) was 24.7% (95% CI, 19.0%-31.5%). Moderator analyses revealed that prevalence of meeting screen time guidelines varied as a function of year of data collection (increased over time), measurement method (higher when questionnaires compared with interview), and type of device use (higher when a combination of screen use activities compared with television/movies only). For children aged 2 to 5 years, the mean prevalence of meeting the screen time guideline (1 h/d) was 35.6% (95% CI, 30.6%-40.9%). Moderator analyses revealed that the prevalence of meeting screen time guidelines varied as a function of type of device use (higher when screen time was television/movies only compared with a combination of screen use activities).
The findings of this meta-analysis indicate that only a minority of children 5 years and younger are meeting screen time guidelines. This highlights the need to provide support and resources to families to best fit evidence-based recommendations into their lives.
儿科指南建议,2 岁以下婴儿应完全避免屏幕时间,而 2 至 5 岁儿童每天的屏幕时间不应超过 1 小时。尽管这些指南已在全球范围内采用,但在遵守指南方面存在很大差异,需要准确估计以指导公共卫生和政策倡议。
通过荟萃分析方法得出 2 岁以下和 2 至 5 岁儿童符合屏幕时间指南的总体患病率。
截至 2020 年 3 月,在 MEDLINE、PsycINFO 和 Embase 中进行了搜索。
如果参与者年龄在 5 岁及以下,且报告了符合(或超过)屏幕时间指南的流行率,则纳入研究。
数据提取遵循系统评价和荟萃分析的首选报告项目 (PRISMA) 指南。两名独立审查员提取了所有相关数据。使用随机效应荟萃分析得出平均流行率。
符合屏幕时间指南的流行率。
从 63 项研究中,共有 89163 名参与者的 95 个非重叠样本被纳入。对于 2 岁以下的儿童,符合屏幕时间指南(0 小时/天)的总体患病率为 24.7%(95%CI,19.0%-31.5%)。 调节分析表明,符合屏幕时间指南的流行率随着数据收集年份的变化而变化(随时间增加),测量方法(与访谈相比,问卷调查更高)和设备使用类型(与仅使用电视/电影相比,使用组合屏幕使用活动更高)。对于 2 至 5 岁的儿童,符合屏幕时间指南(1 小时/天)的平均流行率为 35.6%(95%CI,30.6%-40.9%)。调节分析表明,符合屏幕时间指南的流行率随设备使用类型而变化(仅使用电视/电影的屏幕时间高于组合屏幕使用活动)。
这项荟萃分析的结果表明,只有少数 5 岁及以下的儿童符合屏幕时间指南。这突出表明需要为家庭提供支持和资源,以便将基于证据的建议最好地融入他们的生活。