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Too much screen time can lead to developmental delays in babies, researchers say.
When 1-year-olds viewed screens for more than four hours a day, they had delays in communication and problem-solving skills when assessed at ages 2 and 4, according to a new study published Aug. 21 in JAMA Pediatrics.
They also had delays in fine motor and social skills at age 2, though that gap was gone by age 4, researchers.
It may not be the screens, but what they replace, a Yale expert said.
Face-to-face interaction between a parent and child gives babies information about language and meaning through facial expressions, words, tone of voice and physical feedback, said David Lewkowicz, a developmental psychologist at the Yale Child Study Center in New Haven, Conn.
"It doesn't happen when you're watching the screen,"Lewkowicz told the New York Times.
For the study, Japanese researchers led by Ippei Takahashi of Tohoku University in Sendai, Japan, asked nearly 7,100 parents of young children to answer questions about development and screen time.
More screen time meant greater likelihood of seeing delays.
About 4% of the babies in the study had four or more hours of daily screen time, while 18% had two to four. Most had less than two hours.
Mothers of babies with high levels of screen time were more likely to be younger, first-time moms, with less education and lower incomes and household education. They were also more likely to experience postpartum depression, the study found.
It didn't compare entertainment versus educational screen time. The authors suggested future studies should do that.
"Talk to your child as much as you can, face-to-face as much as you can,"Lewkowicz said he tells parents when asked how much screen time their babies can have.
It's not practical to say they should withhold all screen time, he told the Times.
"No parent would listen to that. It just has to be in moderation. With a heavy dose of real-life social interaction,"Lewkowicz said.
More information
The American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry has more on screen time and children.
SOURCES: JAMA Pediatrics, Aug. 21, 2023; New York Times, Aug. 21, 2023