Hahnefeld Andrea, Fink Monika, Le Beherec Saskia, Baur Marie Anna, Bernhardt Katharina, Mall Volker
Chair of Social Pediatrics, TUM School of Medicine, Technical University of Munich, Munich, Germany.
Kbo Kinderzentrum, Heiglhofstrasse 65, 81377, Munich, Germany.
Eur Child Adolesc Psychiatry. 2025 May;34(5):1615-1624. doi: 10.1007/s00787-024-02593-6. Epub 2024 Oct 23.
The omnipresence of mobile screens and convenience to operate them has led to increased screen time for young children whereas the sequelae of prolonged exposure are not known yet. 70 refugee children (RG) and 111 children of a clinical comparison group (CG) from a help-seeking population (age: M = 5.10; SD = 1.11; range 3.00-6.97 years) were assessed concerning their amount of daily screen exposure time in relation to parental education and distress. Salivary cortisol was collected as a marker for biological stress and children were tested concerning learning performance, non-verbal IQ and vocabulary with the Kaufmann Assessment Battery for Children (KABC-II). Language skills were assessed in educator rating. The amount of children's screen exposure was negatively related to parental education and positively to distress. In the CG, higher amounts of screen time were associated with elevated cortisol levels and lower learning scores. On both measures, the RG and CG only differed in the condition of screen time less than one hour/day, for higher amounts of screen time the CG approached the more problematic scores of the RG. Whereas in the whole sample the amount of screen time was negatively correlated to language performance, it was not correlated to non-verbal IQ-scores. As a higher amount of media exposure in our clinical comparison group is associated with elevated biological stress, decreased learning and lower language performance, it should be classified as a relevant environmental factor and regularly considered in clinical assessments of children and therapeutical interventions, especially in vulnerable subgroups. German clinical trials register, registration number: DRKS00025734, date: 07-23-2021.
移动屏幕的无处不在及其操作便利性导致幼儿的屏幕使用时间增加,而长时间接触屏幕的后遗症尚不清楚。对来自寻求帮助人群的70名难民儿童(RG)和111名临床对照组(CG)儿童(年龄:M = 5.10;标准差 = 1.11;范围3.00 - 6.97岁)进行了评估,以了解他们与父母教育程度和心理困扰相关的每日屏幕暴露时间。收集唾液皮质醇作为生物应激指标,并使用考夫曼儿童评估量表(KABC-II)对儿童的学习成绩、非言语智商和词汇量进行测试。教育工作者对语言技能进行评分评估。儿童的屏幕暴露时间与父母教育程度呈负相关,与心理困扰呈正相关。在临床对照组中,屏幕使用时间越长,皮质醇水平越高,学习成绩越低。在这两项指标上,难民儿童组和临床对照组仅在每天屏幕使用时间少于1小时的情况下存在差异,屏幕使用时间越长,临床对照组的得分越接近难民儿童组的问题得分。在整个样本中,屏幕使用时间与语言表现呈负相关,但与非言语智商得分无关。由于我们临床对照组中较高的媒体暴露量与生物应激增加、学习能力下降和语言表现降低有关,因此应将其归类为一个相关的环境因素,并在儿童临床评估和治疗干预中定期予以考虑,尤其是在脆弱的亚组中。德国临床试验注册,注册号:DRKS00025734,日期:2021年7月23日。