Mackay Lyndsay Jerusha, Komanchuk Jelena, Hayden K Alix, Letourneau Nicole
Faculty of Nursing, University of Calgary, 2500 University Drive NW, Calgary, Alberta, T2N 1N4, Canada.
Libraries & Cultural Resources, University of Calgary, 2500 University Drive NW, Calgary, Alberta, T2N 1N4, Canada.
Syst Rev. 2022 Mar 17;11(1):45. doi: 10.1186/s13643-022-01918-3.
With increases in the use of technological devices worldwide, parental technoference is a potential threat to the quality of parent-child relationships and children's health and development. Parental technoference refers to disrupted interactions between a parent and child due to a parent's use of a technological device. The aims of this scoping review are to map, describe, and summarize the existing evidence from published research studies on the impacts of parental technoference on parent-child relationships and children's health and development and to identify the limitations in the studies and gaps in the literature.
This scoping review will be conducted in accordance with the Joanna Briggs Institute (JBI) methodology. A search for relevant research studies will be undertaken in APA PsycInfo, MEDLINE, Central, Cochrane Database for Systematic Reviews, JBI EBP, and Embase (OVID). CINAHL (Ebsco) and Scopus will also be searched. Grey and popular literature will be excluded. This review will include primary research studies and review papers published in English with no time limit that identify the impacts of technoference on parent-child relationships and child health and developmental outcomes. Parent participants include primary caregivers, either biological, adopted, or foster parents, of children under the age of 18 who engage in technoference. Two reviewers will independently screen the titles, abstracts, and full texts of studies according to the inclusion and exclusion criteria. Disagreements will be resolved through discussion with a third researcher. Data will be extracted into a data charting table including author(s), year of publication, country, research aim, methodology/design, population and sample size, variables/concepts, and corresponding measures and main results. Data will be presented in tables and figures accompanied by a narrative summary.
The goal of this scoping review is to present an overview of the evidence on the impacts of parental technoference on parent-child relationships and child and health developmental outcomes, highlighting the current risk of children of today. It will identify gaps in the literature, inform future research, advise recommendations for parents on technological device use, and possibly guide the development of interventions aimed at addressing parental technoference.
Open Science Framework https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/QNTS5.
随着全球范围内科技设备使用的增加,父母的科技干扰对亲子关系质量以及儿童的健康与发展构成了潜在威胁。父母的科技干扰是指由于父母使用科技设备而导致亲子间互动受到干扰。本综述的目的是梳理、描述和总结已发表研究中关于父母科技干扰对亲子关系、儿童健康与发展影响的现有证据,并确定研究中的局限性和文献中的空白。
本综述将按照乔安娜·布里格斯研究所(JBI)的方法进行。将在APA PsycInfo、MEDLINE、Central、Cochrane系统评价数据库、JBI循证实践数据库和Embase(OVID)中检索相关研究。还将检索CINAHL(Ebsco)和Scopus。灰色文献和通俗文献将被排除。本综述将纳入以英文发表的、不限时间的、确定科技干扰对亲子关系及儿童健康与发育结果影响的原始研究和综述论文。父母参与者包括18岁以下儿童的主要照料者,即亲生父母、养父母或寄养父母,他们存在科技干扰行为。两名评审员将根据纳入和排除标准独立筛选研究的标题、摘要和全文。分歧将通过与第三位研究人员讨论解决。数据将提取到一个数据图表中,包括作者、发表年份、国家、研究目的、方法/设计、人群和样本量、变量/概念以及相应的测量方法和主要结果。数据将以表格和图表形式呈现,并伴有叙述性总结。
本综述的目标是概述关于父母科技干扰对亲子关系以及儿童健康与发育结果影响的证据,突出当今儿童面临的当前风险。它将确定文献中的空白,为未来研究提供信息,就科技设备使用向父母提供建议,并可能指导旨在解决父母科技干扰问题的干预措施的制定。