Increased Screen Time for Children and Youth During the COVID-19 Pandemic

Published: April 12, 2022
Version 1.0

Authors:Elaine Toombs, Christopher J. Mushquash, Linda Mah, Kathy Short, Nancy Young, Chiachen Cheng, Lynn Zhu, Gillian Strudwick, Catherine Birken, Jessica Hopkins, Daphne J. Korczak, Anna Perkhun, Karen B. Born on behalf of the Ontario COVID-19 Science Advisory Table

Key Message

Screen time has substantially increased for children and youth in Ontario and globally during the COVID-19 pandemic. Emergency measures introduced during the pandemic such as closures of schools and recreation contributed to increased screen time. There is a growing body of evidence associating increased screen time with harms to physical (e.g., decreased physical activity, eye strain and headaches), cognitive (e.g., attentiveness) and mental (e.g., reported symptoms of depression and anxiety) health in children and youth. There are evidence-based strategies to promote healthy screen habits for children and their families which offer an approach to encourage healthier screen use in the home setting and mitigate potential harms. However, the burden to reduce screen time cannot fall to parents and families alone. Policies are needed to avoid closures of schools and recreation, and ensure alternatives to screen time for children and youth of all ages that promote socialization and physical activity. In addition, there are key equity considerations when it comes to accessibility of alternatives to screen time such as child care and community recreation. 

Summary

Background

Evidence from Ontario and globally has associated pandemic-related stay-at-home orders, closures of schools and recreation with increased screen time for children and youth. Screen time is considered any time spent with an electronic device, and can be active (e.g., video chatting, online learning) or passive (e.g., watching television). Recommendations from pediatric societies and other associations typically recommend limits to screen time to promote healthy development. This brief explores evidence associating screen time with physical, cognitive and mental health outcomes in children and youth, as well as evidence-informed strategies to encourage screen use within guidelines as well as healthy screen habits. Increased screen time in children and youth during the COVID-19 pandemic necessitates considerations of ways in which policies can promote screen use within guidelines and mitigate impacts to children and youth of public health emergency responses. 

Questions

What factors mitigate or exacerbate the potential for negative effects of screen time on children and youth during the COVID-19 pandemic? 

What evidence-informed strategies are useful for parents/caregivers to encourage screen use that falls within recommended guidelines for children and youth? 

What policies can address screen time in children and youth? 

Findings

Measures such as stay-at-home orders, closures of schools, and recreation facilities have likely driven increased screen time for children and youth. The reduction of in-person activities has necessitated the use of screens for education, socialization, cultural activities, and family gatherings. The impact of screen use on health outcomes in children and youth varies by age, gender and other factors.

Interpretation

There is growing evidence that associates pandemic-related closures and stay-at-home orders with increased screen time in children and youth. Evidence from research related to screen time interventions has emphasized strategies for individuals to decrease and limit screen use. The rise in screen time during the pandemic is concerning, and public health may have a role in promoting messages to parents and caregivers with concrete, practical ways to curb or limit children’s screen use. Individual-level interventions vary based upon the age of children or youth,  and can include education and resources to support good screen hygiene for youth, parents and caregivers. Policy-level interventions are necessary to support parents, caregivers and children to reduce screen time. Equitable access to safe recreational opportunities for all children with a focus on children, families and communities that may lack access to resources such as high-quality child care or accessible recreation settings. These could include, for  example, ensuring open access to in-person school and related extracurricular activities for children of all ages, developmental stages and abilities. 

Full text

References

Document Information & Citation

Additional Resources

linkedin facebook pinterest youtube rss twitter instagram facebook-blank rss-blank linkedin-blank pinterest youtube twitter instagram