Predictors of screen exposure among infants under 2 years of age during the COVID-19 pandemic

IF 1.9 3区 心理学 Q3 PSYCHOLOGY, DEVELOPMENTAL Infant Behavior & Development Pub Date : 2023-08-28 DOI:10.1016/j.infbeh.2023.101885
Livia Branco Campos , Marina Kcrmar , Ana Alexandra Caldas Osório
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Abstract

Contradicting pediatric societies’ recommendations, studies show that screen exposure begins at the first year of life for many children worldwide, with parental needs, educational purposes, and parental stress emerging as associated factors. However, the COVID-19 pandemic has likely worsened this scenario. This study aims to: 1) estimate the average daily screen exposure time for Brazilian infants aged 0–23 months during the COVID-19 pandemic based on caregiver report; 2) analyze the correlation between average exposure time, parental motivations for exposure, parental burnout levels and infant age; and 3) test the predictive role of parental motivations, burnout, and infant age on infant screen exposure. For this purpose, 139 parents (living in Brazil) answered online to questionnaires on infant screen exposure, parental motivations for exposure (four subscales: Parental Needs; Educational; Child’s Desires/Family Routine; Behavioral Control), and parental burnout (Total score; four subscales: Emotional Exhaustion; Contrast; Feelings of Being Fed Up; Emotional Distancing). On average, infants were exposed to screens for 131 min/day. Higher scores on the four parental motivation subscales and higher parental burnout (specifically the Contrast subscale) correlated with longer exposure times. Furthermore, the motivation subscales Parental Needs and Child's Desires/family routine, the burnout subscale Contrast and infant age predicted greater screen exposure, while the burnout scale Feelings of Being Fed Up predicted less exposure. Our results suggest that infants in Brazil were exposed to substantial amounts of screen time during the pandemic. Interventions aiming to reduce screen time must consider parental motivations and parental burnout/mental health along with infant age.

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COVID-19大流行期间2岁以下婴儿屏幕暴露的预测因素
与儿科协会的建议相反,研究表明,世界各地许多儿童在出生后第一年就开始接触屏幕,父母的需要、教育目的和父母的压力都是相关因素。然而,COVID-19大流行可能使这种情况恶化。本研究旨在:1)根据护理人员报告估算COVID-19大流行期间巴西0-23个月婴儿的平均每日屏幕暴露时间;2)分析平均暴露时间、父母暴露动机、父母倦怠水平与幼儿年龄的相关性;3)测试父母动机、倦怠和婴儿年龄对婴儿屏幕暴露的预测作用。为此,139名父母(居住在巴西)在线回答了关于婴儿屏幕暴露、父母暴露动机(四个子量表:父母需求;教育;孩子的愿望/家庭日常;行为控制)和父母倦怠(总分;四个子量表:情绪耗竭;对比;厌倦的感觉;情感上的距离)。婴儿平均每天接触屏幕131分钟。四个父母动机分量表得分越高,父母倦怠程度越高(特别是对比分量表),接触时间越长。此外,动机分量表“父母需要”和“孩子渴望/家庭常规”、倦怠分量表“对比”和“婴儿年龄”预测更多的屏幕暴露,倦怠分量表“厌倦感”预测较少的屏幕暴露。我们的研究结果表明,巴西的婴儿在大流行期间暴露于大量的屏幕时间。旨在减少屏幕时间的干预措施必须考虑父母的动机和父母的倦怠/心理健康以及婴儿年龄。
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来源期刊
Infant Behavior & Development
Infant Behavior & Development PSYCHOLOGY, DEVELOPMENTAL-
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
4.80%
发文量
94
期刊介绍: Infant Behavior & Development publishes empirical (fundamental and clinical), theoretical, methodological and review papers. Brief reports dealing with behavioral development during infancy (up to 3 years) will also be considered. Papers of an inter- and multidisciplinary nature, for example neuroscience, non-linear dynamics and modelling approaches, are particularly encouraged. Areas covered by the journal include cognitive development, emotional development, perception, perception-action coupling, motor development and socialisation.
期刊最新文献
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