Figures
Abstract
Background
Pre-school children spend an average of two-hours daily using screens. We examined associations between screen-time on pre-school behavior using data from the Canadian Healthy Infant Longitudinal Development (CHILD) study.
Methods
CHILD participant parents completed the Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL) at five-years of age. Parents reported their child’s total screen-time including gaming and mobile devices. Screen-time was categorized using the recommended threshold of two-hours/day for five-years or one-hour/day for three-years. Multiple linear regression examined associations between screen-time and externalizing behavior (e.g. inattention and aggression). Multiple logistic regression identified characteristics of children at risk for clinically significant externalizing problems (CBCL T-score≥65).
Results
Screen-time was available for over 95% of children (2,322/2,427) with CBCL data. Mean screen-time was 1·4 hours/day (95%CI 1·4, 1·5) at five-years and 1·5 hours/day (95%CI: 1·5, 1·6) at three-years. Compared to children with less than 30-minutes/day screen-time, those watching more than two-hours/day (13·7%) had a 2·2-point increase in externalizing T-score (95%CI: 0·9, 3·5, p≤0·001); a five-fold increased odd for reporting clinically significant externalizing problems (95%CI: 1·0, 25·0, p = 0·05); and were 5·9 times more likely to report clinically significant inattention problems (95%CI: 1·6, 21·5, p = 0·01). Children with a DSM-5 ADHD T-score above the 65 clinical cut-off were considered to have significant ADHD type symptoms (n = 24). Children with more than 2-hours of screen-time/day had a 7·7-fold increased risk of meeting criteria for ADHD (95%CI: 1·6, 38·1, p = 0·01). There was no significant association between screen-time and aggressive behaviors (p>0.05).
Citation: Tamana SK, Ezeugwu V, Chikuma J, Lefebvre DL, Azad MB, Moraes TJ, et al. (2019) Screen-time is associated with inattention problems in preschoolers: Results from the CHILD birth cohort study. PLoS ONE 14(4): e0213995. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0213995
Editor: Luca Cerniglia, International Telematic University Uninettuno, ITALY
Received: September 24, 2018; Accepted: March 5, 2019; Published: April 17, 2019
Copyright: © 2019 Tamana et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Data Availability: All relevant data are within the manuscript and its Supporting Information files.
Funding: This work was supported by: 1. The Allergy Genes and Environment Network of Centres of Excellence (AllerGen NCE). 2. Women’s and Children’s Health Research Institute. 3. The Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.
Competing interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
Introduction
Childhood screen-time has increased over the years[1–4]. Increased screen-time has been associated with unhealthy dietary patterns, poor sleep quality, cardiovascular disease, and obesity[5] in children. In 2016, the new Canadian 24-hour Movement Guidelines[6, 7] recommend that children aged five and over should have less than two-hours of screen-time/day, while limiting screen-time to less than one-hour/day for two-four year olds. It has been estimated that children between three to five years old are exposed to an average of two-hours of screen-time per day[8–13] in Canada.
There has been a significant increase in screen options in recent years, from device choices to streaming content, with rising concern that screen-time may have negative consequences for mental health[14]. Studies of school-aged children have shown associations between increased television viewing time and attention problems[15–17]. The Dunedin Study found that increased television viewing from five to eleven years old was associated with attention problems in adolescence[18]. In their study sample, children reportedly watched an average of 2-hours of television each day between[18]. Recent study examining adolescent sedentary behaviors among suggested that screen-time should be considered a risk factor for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) symptoms[19]. Swing et al[20] reported that television viewing time greater than 2-hours per day was associated with increased attention problems among older children. A meta-analysis concluded that television viewing or gaming among 4–17 years old children was modestly associated with later ADHD symptoms[4]. Reports in toddlers and preschoolers have linked television viewing time above 1.5 hours to later behavioral and emotional problems[8]. There is less research examining associations between screen-time exposure and behavioral development in the preschool years. Most studies have focused on school-aged children, only considered traditional screen sources such as television viewing, or did not allow for many potential confounders.
We analyzed data from the population-based Canadian Healthy Infant Longitudinal Development (CHILD) birth cohort study to determine associations between screen-time and behavioral outcomes at age 5 years. Prolonged screen-time may displace time spent in other activities such as active play; important to promoting development in young children[21, 22]. The extensive CHILD Study assessment allowed us to examine major determinants of mental health including movement behaviors (e.g. screen-time, sleep, physical activity) in addition to important covariates such as parenting stress, socioeconomic status, marital status, and breastfeeding. We investigated whether parents of children exposed to more screen-time reported more externalizing and internalizing behavior problems at 5 years of age. We sought to determine if increased screen-time above the Canadian recommended guideline is associated with clinically significant behavior problems in young children. We hypothesized that children exposed to screen-time above the 2-hour threshold would exhibit clinically significant (T-Score ≥65) ADHD type behavior problems.
Materials and methods
Study population and design
This study involved a population-based sample of 3,455 children recruited in four Canadian (Edmonton, Toronto, Vancouver, and Manitoba) from the CHILD study (www.childstudy.ca). CHILD is a naturalistic observational study initially designed to examine gene-environment interactions on the development of asthma and atopy[23, 24]. Pregnant mothers ≥18 were recruited nationally from hospital and birth centres in the second or third trimester. Parent-child dyads were enrolled during pregnancy between 2009 and 2012. Parents completed questionnaires about family and child characteristics (e.g. socioeconomic status (SES), ethnicity), maternal and infant nutrition, and maternal stress at baseline and follow-up. At three and five-year follow-up clinic visits, participating families completed questionnaires about their child’s screen-time, sleep quality, and physical activity. CHILD participants parents completed a questionnaire assessment about their child’s behavior[25] at five-years. Informed consent was obtained from all mothers, and consenting fathers. The study was approved by the University of Alberta Research Ethics Board, the University of British Columbia Research Ethics Board, the University of Manitoba Research Ethics Board, and the University of Toronto Research Ethics Board and The Hospital for Sickkids.
Data on potential covariates associated with screen-time or behavior were obtained from hospital records (gender, birth weight in kg, gestational age in weeks, birth order, sibling status, gestational diabetes, maternal age) or standardized questionnaires (sleep duration or sleep disruption, physical activity, SES, marital status, ethnicity, household smoke exposure, breastfeeding, maternal depression, parent-child interaction, and parenting stress at five years visit). A detailed overview of the covariates included in this analysis is provided in the S2 File.
Screen-time (primary exposure variable).
Screen-time (hh:mm) was assessed at ages three and five-years. Parents reported their child’s total screen-time/day, which included watching TV/DVD’s, using a computer, tablet, mobile phone, or playing video games. Screen-time was grouped into three categories based on the recommended Canadian 24-hour Movement Guidelines for children 5–13 years(6): 1) less than 30-minutes/day; 2) between 30-minutes and two-hours daily; or 3) more than 2-hours. The upper threshold for total screen-time at age three-years was adjusted to one-hour per day based on the Canadian 24-hour Movement Guidelines for Young Children[26]. The Canadian guidelines provide screen-time recommendations that are consistent with the American Academy of Pediatrics recommendations[22, 27].
Preschool behavior (outcome variable).
The Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL) preschool version[28] was completed by parents at age five-years at all CHILD sites. The CBCL is a 99-item empirically validated measure of parent-reported behavior problems in early childhood[28]. The CBCL produces a T-score (mean of 50 points and a standard deviation of 10 points based on normative data) for internalizing problems (e.g. anxious/depressed, withdrawal, somatic, emotionally reactive), externalizing problems (e.g. inattention, aggressiveness) and total problems (internalizing, externalizing, sleep issues, and other problems)[28, 29]. The CBCL also includes five Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5)-oriented syndrome scales including attention deficit hyperactivity (ADHD) problems, oppositional defiant problems, depressive problems, anxiety problems, and autism spectrum disorder. The DSM-ADHD scale has good predictive validity of ADHD diagnosis in community and outpatient samples[30]. Higher scores indicate greater behavior problems. We used the externalizing (primary outcome), internalizing (secondary outcome) and total (secondary outcome) linear T-scores for this analysis. We also applied the cut-off score of ≥65 points which indicates clinically significant behavior problems based on the CBCL manual[28].
Statistical analysis
Children with reported developmental or genetic disorders, such as autism, diagnosed by their healthcare professional, (n = 71) were removed from all analyses. Characteristics of those families who provided CBCL data were compared to those without CBCL data using chi-squared analysis for categorical variables and t-test for continuous variables.
Univariate analyses, t-test for dichotomous predictors and linear regression for continuous variables, were used to identify associations between screen-time categories (primary exposure variable), sleep duration, sleep disordered breathing (SDB), physical activity, child and family characteristics and CBCL assessed externalizing (primary outcome), internalizing, and total behavior problems (secondary outcomes) at five-years.
Multiple linear regression (entry method) was used to assess the association between screen-time and behavior problem scores while adjusting for child gender and factors significant in univariate analysis (p≤0·05). The final model was determined based on the Akaike Information Criterion (AIC) where the lowest values indicated the best model fit. Missing values for all covariates were replaced with the mean for continuous for variables and the reference for categorical variables. A dummy variable was included in the analysis in order to account for the mean replacement for continuous variables. A sensitivity analysis was conducted to explore associations of movement behaviors known to interact and influence one another in accordance with the 24- Canadian 24-hour Movement Guidelines[6, 7]. Interactions terms for screen-time, physical activity, and sleep were considered in multiple linear regression analyses (p’s≤0·05). We completed a sensitivity analysis (multiple logistic regression) to examine the association between screen-time and clinically significant behavior problems using a cut-off CBCL T-score of ≥65. Statistical analysis was completed using STATA, version 14.
Results
Sample characteristics
Of the 3,455 families enrolled in the CHILD study, 2,427 (70·2%) children had CBCL data at five-years. Those with CBCL data had a higher family income and were more likely to be Caucasian (see Table 1). Parents of children with CBCL data reported significantly less screen-time/day than those children without CBCL data (Mean 1·4 hours; 95%CI 1·4, 1·5 vs. 1·8 hours; 95%CI 1·5, 2·1 vs. p = 0·01; Table 1).
Prevalence of behavior problems at age five-years
Clinically significant externalizing behavior problems (T-score ≥65) was observed among 1·2% of children (n = 28), while 2·5% of children (n = 61) exhibited clinically significant internalizing behavior problems. Less than 1% of children (n = 18) had both clinically significant internalizing and externalizing behavior problems.
Boys had a higher CBCL externalizing T-score (mean = 40·6, SD = 9·9) than girls (mean = 38·7, SD = 9·0; p = ≤0·001). Boys were more likely to be classified as having clinically significant (T-score ≥65) externalizing behavior problems than girls (n = 41 vs n = 20, p≤0·05). There were no differences by gender observed for internalizing behavior problems.
Exposure to screen-time
Screen-time data was available for 96% (2322/2427) of participants whose parents had completed the CBCL questionnaire. At five-years, over 13% (n = 317) of children were exposed to more than 2-hours of screen-time/day while 83% (n = 2,005/2,427) of children met the Canadian recommended[22] screen-time guidelines of less than 2-hours per day (Fig 1). At three-years, 58% of children (1,415/2,427) met the Canadian recommended screen-time guideline of less than 1-hour of screen-time/day. There were no significant differences by gender for reported screen-time.
Children exposed to more screen-time showed increased behavioral morbidity
In a dose-response manner, children exposed to more screen-time, at either age three and five-years, showed significantly increased behavior problems at five-years in univariate analysis. Briefly, children who watched more than 2-hours of screen-time/day had increased externalizing, internalizing, and total behavior problems scores compared to children who watched less than 30-minutes. Univariate linear results for the CBCL composite scales are provided in S1 Table through S9 Table.
Screen time remained significant in the linear multivariate results for total, internalizing, and externalizing behavior. Adjusted results for total behavior problems (secondary outcome) are presented in S3 File and S9 Table.
CBCL externalizing behaviour multiple linear regression analyses (primary outcome).
Children exposed to more than 2-hours of screen-time had a 2·2-point increase in externalizing behavior problem T-score (95%CI: 0·9, 3·5, p≤0·001; model 1, Table 2) when controlling for sleep duration, parent-reported SDB symptoms, gender, SES, marital status, parenting stress, and maternal depression. Children who spent two or more hours/week participating in organized physical activities showed a 1·3-point reduction in externalizing behavior score (95%CI: -2·1, -0·6, p≤0·001). There were no significant interactions between screen-time and gender, physical activity, school enrolled, sleep duration, SDB, or parenting stress (all p>0·05). The association between screen-time at five-years and increased externalizing behavioral morbidity remained significant when controlling for daily reported hours of screen-time at three-years (p≤0·05).
Clinically significant externalizing behaviors (CBCL≥65): Parents of children exposed to more than two-hours of screen-time were 5-times more likely to report clinically relevant externalizing behavior problems (OR 5·0, 95%CI: 1·0, 25·0, p = 0·05; model 2, Table 2) compared to parents of children exposed to less than 30-minutes of screen-time/day. Aside from gender, screen-time had the strongest association with externalizing behavioral morbidity. Additional covariates associated with externalizing behavior included shorter sleep duration, SES, and parenting stress (Table 2). There was no significant association between physical activity, SDB, marital status, or maternal depression and externalizing behavior problems in adjusted analyses.
Externalizing behavior subscales.
We explored the association between screen-time and the inattention and aggressive externalizing behavior subscales in multiple linear regression analysis. Screen-time above the 2-hours threshold was significantly associated with an inattention problem score above the clinical cut-off of 65 (5·9 OR, 95%CI: 1·6, 21·5, p = 0·01; model 1, Table 3), compared to children with less than 30-minutes of screen-time per day. That is, parents of children exposed to more screen time were 5.9 times more likely to report inattention behavioral morbidity. There was no significant association between screen-time and aggressive behavior problems (model 2, Table 3).
Children with a DSM-5 ADHD T-score above the clinical cut-off of 65 were considered to have significant ADHD type symptoms (n = 24). More than 2-hours of screen-time/day was significantly associated with an ADHD score above the clinical-cut-off of 65 (7·7 OR, 95%CI: 1·6, 38·1, p = 0·01; Table 4, model 2) adjusting for gender, gestational diabetes, and parenting stress. Suggesting that parents of children exposed to excessive screen-time were more likely to report ADHD type behavioral morbidity. The effects remained significant even after removing from our analyses five children who had been previously diagnosed with ADHD by a healthcare professional.
CBCL internalizing results multiple linear regression analyses (secondary outcome).
Screen-time above the two-hours/day threshold exposure at five years was associated with a 1.8-point higher internalizing behavior T-scores (95%CI: 0.6, 3.1 p≤0.001) after adjusting for physical activity, parent reported SDB symptoms, SES, breastfeeding, parenting stress, and maternal depression (model 1, Table 5). None of the screen-time thresholds were associated with clinically significant internalizing morbidity (model 2, Table 5).
Discussion
This analysis of data from a large-population based birth cohort demonstrated a dose-response relationship between screen-time and behavioral problems. Screen use was common in our sample of pre-school children with an average of 1·4 hours/day. Critically, screen-time above the two-hours threshold was associated with an increased risk of clinically significant externalizing morbidity and specifically inattention problems. The association between screen-time and behavioral morbidity was greater than any other risk factors including sleep duration, parenting stress, and socio-economic factors. Consistent with prior reports, we found that children who participated in more than two-hours/week of organized physical activity were less likely to experience mental health morbidity[31].
Results from this study may help clarify mixed findings from prior research. Two prior studies in pre-school children did not find an association between screen-time and behavior problems. A UK study reported that screen-time was not a risk factor for increased behavior problems among five-year old children[31]. That study[31] used a behavior screening questionnaire (Strength and Difficulties Questionnaire subscales) that may not be sensitive to clinically significant behavioral problems[32]. Alternatively, the inclusion of children with 30-minutes to two-hours screen-time in their reference category may have attenuated their findings. A small cross-sectional study[33] of 200 children ages two to five-years found no statistically significant association between increased screen-time and externalizing behavior problems in adjusted analysis[33]. Externalizing behavior problems were relatively more common among boys compared to girls in our sample. However, we did not observe a significant interaction between gender and screen-time exposure. Our findings confirm the results of similar studies showing associations between early television viewing and ADHD symptoms[18, 34, 35].
Behavioral problems identified in this study are unlikely to reflect a referral bias as CHILD study families were recruited from the general population. We used an empirically validated outcome to measure behavior and mental health problems in young children. The large sample size allowed us to observe associations between screen-time and clinically significant behavioral morbidity while controlling for multiple confounders.
Limitations
One of the limitations of this current study is that screen-time, sleep, and physical activity, were parent-reported and not validated against objective measures. We only had repeated screen-time and behavior data available for a sub-sample of our cohort (n = 367) which limited our ability to determine directionality. As such, it is possible parents may respond to children who exhibit externalizing behavior difficulties by offering more screen-time or using increased opportunity for screen-time as a self-soothing strategy. Although we identified prior studies in school-aged children[18, 34, 36, 37] that have shown a significant association between screen-time and inattention while controlling for earlier attention problems. We were also not able to determine if the media content (e.g. educational, video gaming, social media), or screen type (television, computer, tablet) were important predictors of behavioral morbidity. For example, the UK Millennium Cohort Study[20] showed that television exposure (but not gaming) above three-hours/day at age five was significantly associated with conduct behavior problems by age seven years. The sample of 2,447 children included in our analysis, overall, represented a higher SES, an older maternal age, were more likely to be of Caucasian compared to the general population[38]. As a result, our findings may not be generalizable to other populations and should be replicated. Over 84% of our sample met the recommended ten to thirteen-hours of sleep for a preschool child[39, 40] limiting our ability to examine the impact of sleep duration on behavior.
Future directions
Our results suggest that physicians and educators promote limiting young children’s screen-time exposure in line with recommended guidelines[22, 41, 42]. Future studies should include randomized controlled trials of healthy screen-time use to ascertain whether limiting children’s screen-time leads to differences in attention problems. It is possible that screen-time may increase with age and even fewer children will meet the recommended two-hours of screen-time/day. Future longitudinal studies should examine whether early exposure to electronic devices has potential negative effects for mental health through school-age and adolescence. The introduction of technology in the classroom warrants further investigation into associations between longer duration of screen-time exposure and behavioral development. Little is known about how the type of media consumed is linked to mental health outcomes, and whether screen content itself is detrimental or is a marker for less activity or social interaction. Increased use of video and text chat, social-media platforms, and social-apps may have differential effects on mental health outcomes in children.
Conclusion
We provide results from one of the largest birth cohort studies to examine screen-time exposure and behavioral morbidity in pre-school children. Screen-time above the two-hours threshold at 5-years was associated with an increased risk of clinically relevant externalizing morbidity and specifically inattention problems. The association between screen-time and behavioral morbidity was greater than any other risk factor including sleep, parenting stress, and socio-economic factors. Our findings indicate that pre-school may be a critical period for supporting parents and families on education about limiting screen-time and supporting physical activity.
Supporting information
S1 File. List of CHILD study investigators contributors.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0213995.s001
(DOCX)
S2 File. Description of supplemental methods.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0213995.s002
(DOCX)
S3 File. Multivariate results for total behavior problems.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0213995.s003
(DOCX)
S1 Table. Univariate t-test analysis results for associations between screen-time, physical activity, and sleep and behavioral morbidity at five years (n = 2322).
Note: SD = standard deviation; SES: socioeconomic status; SDB = sleep disordered breathing aAnalyzed by One-way ANOVA *p≤0.05 based on Tukey post hoc test.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0213995.s004
(DOCX)
S2 Table. Univariate logistic regression results for associations between screen-time, physical activity, and sleep and behavioral morbidity.
Caption: CI = confidence interval; SDB = sleep disordered breathing.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0213995.s005
(DOCX)
S3 Table. Univariate t-test analysis of associations between categorical explanatory variables and externalizing behavior problems (primary outcome) at five years (n = 2447).
Note: SD = standard deviation; SES: socioeconomic status; SDB = sleep disordered breathing a Analyzed by One-way ANOVA *p≤0.05 based on Tukey post hoc test.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0213995.s006
(DOCX)
S4 Table. Univariate linear regression analysis of associations between continuous explanatory variables and externalizing behavior problems at five-years of age (n = 2,447).
Caption: PSI-SF = Parenting Stress Index-Self Report, higher score presents increased levels of parenting stress; P-CDI = Parent-Child Dysfunction Index, higher scores reflect increased perceived difficulties; CES-D = Centre for Epidemiological Studies—Depression, higher scores represent increased maternal symptoms of depression.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0213995.s007
(DOCX)
S5 Table. Univariate t-test analysis of associations between categorical explanatory variables and internalizing behavior problems (primary outcome) at five years (n = 2447).
Note: SD = standard deviation; SES: socioeconomic status; SDB = sleep disordered breathing a Analyzed by One-way ANOVA *p≤0.05 based on Tukey post hoc test.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0213995.s008
(DOCX)
S6 Table. Univariate linear regression analysis of associations between continuous explanatory variables and internalizing behavior problems at five-years of age (n = 2,447).
Caption: PSI-SF = Parenting Stress Index-Self Report, higher score presents increased levels of parenting stress; P-CDI = Parent-Child Dysfunction Index, higher scores reflect increased perceived difficulties; CES-D = Centre for Epidemiological Studies–Depression, higher scores represent increased maternal symptoms of depression.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0213995.s009
(DOCX)
S7 Table. Univariate t-test analysis of associations between categorical explanatory variables and total behavior problems (primary outcome) at five years (n = 2447).
Note: SD = standard deviation; SES: socioeconomic status; SDB = sleep disordered breathing a Analyzed by One-way ANOVA *p≤0.05 based on Tukey post hoc test.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0213995.s010
(DOCX)
S8 Table. Univariate linear regression analysis of associations between continuous explanatory variables and total behavior problems at five-years of age (n = 2,447).
Caption: PSI-SF = Parenting Stress Index-Self Report, higher score presents increased levels of parenting stress; P-CDI = Parent-Child Dysfunction Index, higher scores reflect increased perceived difficulties; CES-D = Centre for Epidemiological Studies—Depression, higher scores represent increased maternal symptoms of depression.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0213995.s011
(DOCX)
S9 Table. Multiple regression analysis examining associations between screen-time and the CBCL total behavior problem T-score at five-years of age (n = 2,427).
Caption: SDB = Sleep Disordered Breathing, based on 6 items; PCD-I = Parent-Child Dysfunction Index, higher scores represents; PSI-SF = Parenting Stress Index-Self Report, higher score presents increased levels of parenting stress; CES-D = Centre for Epidemiological Studies—Depression, higher scores represent increased maternal symptoms of depression.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0213995.s012
(DOCX)
Acknowledgments
We are grateful to all the families who took part in this study, and the whole CHILD team, which includes interviewers, computer and laboratory technicians, clerical workers, research scientists, volunteers, managers, receptionists and nurses. The Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) and the Allergy, Genes and Environment (AllerGen) Network of Centres of Excellence provided core support for CHILD. This research was specifically funded by CIHR and the Women and Children’s Health Research Institute (WCHRI) at the University of Alberta.
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