The
recommendations are bound to prompt eye-rolling and LOLs from many
teens but an influential pediatricians group says parents need to know
that unrestricted media use can have serious consequences.
It's
been linked with violence, cyberbullying, school woes, obesity, lack of
sleep and a host of other problems. It's not a major cause of these
troubles, but "many parents are clueless" about the profound impact
media exposure can have on their children, said Dr. Victor Strasburger,
lead author of the new American Academy of Pediatrics policy
"This
is the 21st century and they need to get with it," said Strasburger, a
University of New Mexico adolescent medicine specialist.
The
policy is aimed at all kids, including those who use smartphones,
computers and other Internet-connected devices. It expands the academy's
longstanding recommendations on banning televisions from children's and
teens' bedrooms and limiting entertainment screen time to no more than
two hours daily.
Under the new policy, those two hours include
using the Internet for entertainment, including Facebook, Twitter, TV
and movies; online homework is an exception.
The policy statement
cites a 2010 report that found U.S. children aged 8 to 18 spend an
average of more than seven hours daily using some kind of entertainment
media. Many kids now watch TV online and many send text messages from
their bedrooms after "lights out," including sexually explicit images by
cellphone or Internet, yet few parents set rules about media use, the
policy says.
"I guarantee you that if you have a 14-year-old boy and he has an
Internet connection in his bedroom, he is looking at pornography,"
Strasburger said.
The policy notes that three-quarters of kids
aged 12 to 17 own cellphones; nearly all teens send text messages, and
many younger kids have phones giving them online access.
Mark Risinger, 16, of Glenview, Ill., is allowed to
use his smartphone and laptop in his room, and says he spends about four
hours daily on the Internet doing homework, using Facebook and YouTube
and watching movies. He said a two-hour Internet time limit "would be catastrophic" and that
kids won't follow the advice, "they'll just find a way to get around
it."
Source: Yahoo News
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