School of Public Health, Medical College of Soochow University, 199 Ren Ai Road, 215123, Suzhou, Jiangsu, China.
BMC Public Health. 2022 Apr 22;22(1):810. doi: 10.1186/s12889-022-13155-3.
Many literature reviews summarized relationships between screen time and child health, but they only included a few studies conducted in Chinese children and adolescents. The potential influence of screen time may vary by social context. The current systematic review and meta-analysis aimed to evaluate relationships between screen time and health issues among Chinese school-aged children and adolescents.
Peer-reviewed articles written in Chinese and English were retrieved from CNKI, Wanfang, PubMed, Embase, and Web of Science from inception to June 2020. The Downs & Black checklist was applied to assess study quality. Meta analyses used random effect models and mixed effects model to calculate pooled adjusted odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals. Heterogeneity, sensitivity, and publication bias were assessed using Q and I statistics, "one-study removed" analysis, the funnel plot, trim and fill analysis, and classical fail-safe N, respectively.
In total, we identified 252 articles reporting 268 studies with unique samples. These studies investigated relationships between screen time and health issues of adiposity, myopia, psycho-behavioral problems, poor academic performance, cardiometabolic disease risks, sleep disorder, poor physical fitness, musculoskeletal injury, sub-health, and miscellaneous issues of height and pubertal growth, injury, sick leave, and respiratory symptoms. Proportions of studies reporting positive relationships with screen time were lowest in adiposity (50.6%) and higher in myopia (59.2%) and psycho-behavioral problems (81.8%). Other health issues were examined in 10 or less studies, all of which had more than half showing positive relationships. The pooled odds ratio from 19 studies comparing health risks with the screen time cutoff of 2 hours per day was 1.40 (95% CI: 1.31 to 1.50, I = 85.9%). The pooled effect size was 1.29 (95% CI: 1.20 to 1.39) after trimming 7 studies for publication bias adjustments.
Findings exclusively generated from Chinese school-aged children and adolescents resonate those mainly from western countries. Evidence suggests that higher levels of screen time are related with greater risks of various health issues, although the relationships appear to be weak and intertwined with other confounding factors. Future studies need to investigate health-specific dose effects and mechanisms of screen time.
许多文献综述总结了屏幕时间与儿童健康之间的关系,但它们只包括了一些在中国儿童和青少年中进行的研究。屏幕时间的潜在影响可能因社会背景而异。本系统评价和荟萃分析旨在评估屏幕时间与中国学龄儿童和青少年健康问题之间的关系。
从中国知网、万方、PubMed、Embase 和 Web of Science 检索了 2020 年 6 月以前发表的中英文同行评议文章。采用 Downs 和 Black 清单评估研究质量。荟萃分析采用随机效应模型和混合效应模型计算汇总调整后的比值比和 95%置信区间。采用 Q 和 I 统计量、“一研究去除”分析、漏斗图、修剪和填充分析以及经典失效安全 N 分别评估异质性、敏感性和发表偏倚。
共纳入 252 篇文章,报道了 268 项具有独特样本的研究。这些研究调查了屏幕时间与肥胖、近视、心理行为问题、学业成绩不佳、心血管代谢疾病风险、睡眠障碍、体能不佳、肌肉骨骼损伤、亚健康和身高与青春期生长、损伤、病假、呼吸道症状等健康问题之间的关系。与屏幕时间呈正相关的研究比例在肥胖(50.6%)中最低,在近视(59.2%)和心理行为问题(81.8%)中较高。其他健康问题的研究少于 10 项,其中超过一半的研究显示出正相关关系。19 项研究比较了 2 小时/天的屏幕时间截定点与健康风险,汇总的比值比为 1.40(95%CI:1.31 至 1.50,I=85.9%)。经过发表偏倚调整后,7 项研究的修剪量为 1.29(95%CI:1.20 至 1.39)。
专门针对中国学龄儿童和青少年的研究结果与主要来自西方国家的研究结果一致。证据表明,较高的屏幕时间与各种健康问题的风险增加有关,尽管这些关系似乎较弱,且与其他混杂因素交织在一起。未来的研究需要调查健康特定剂量效应和屏幕时间的作用机制。