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Parent Perspectives on Their Young Child’s Television Viewing

Parent Perspectives on Their Young Child’s Television Viewing. Becca Calhoun. Background. Childhood television viewing has been associated with increased aggression, sleep disturbance, obesity, and attentional disorders.

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Parent Perspectives on Their Young Child’s Television Viewing

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  1. Parent Perspectives on Their Young Child’s Television Viewing Becca Calhoun

  2. Background • Childhood television viewing has been associated with increased aggression, sleep disturbance, obesity, and attentional disorders. • AAP recommends no TV for children under age 2 & no more than 1-2 hours of educational programming for children over 2. • 2/3 of children under 6 live in households where the TV is on 50% of the time & 36% in homes where the TV is on “all the time”. • Parents mediate both the content and the amount of television their child watches and most parents have either content or time rules for their children.

  3. Research Questions • Main: How do parents of young children use television in their daily lives, what do they believe about it and what would be challenging for them about reducing their child’s television intake? • Secondary: What aspects of the television reduction intervention and design work well for parents? What aspects are overly burdensome or unacceptable?

  4. Conceptual Model Parent’s Beliefs about Television Parent’s Self-Efficacy Amount of TV Watched by Child Family and Social Environment Child Characteristics

  5. Parents Recruited From Community & Enrolled Baseline Questionnaire & Consent Forms Mailed to interested families Randomization Standard Initial Interview Consent Obtained Baseline Data Collected Monthly Newsletter Children’s Book Intensive Initial Interview Consent Obtained Baseline Data Collected Monthly Newsletter Children’s Book TV Allowance Device Ongoing Support via Research Assistant Control Initial interview Consent Obtained Baseline Data Collected Weekly TV Diaries for 4 months Exit Interview Conducted

  6. Initial Interview Context & Coding • Conducted in the parent’s home • Approximately an hour long • With children present • Semi-structured questions • What do you think about your child’s television viewing? • Direct quotes were noted at the time of interview • Interview notes coded using Atlas.ti

  7. Findings – Parental Beliefs • 19 parents expressed only negative views • “(TV is) not a good use of kids time and I feel they can learn better from almost any other activity.” • “I don’t like the marketing to kids.” • 9 expressed mixed views • “I have mixed feelings about it because I feel it is a nice tool to have, but doesn’t become a babysitter.” • 2 expressed only positive views • “I like the Disney Channel and PBS and sometimes Nick. I like the content.”

  8. Findings – Challenges to TV Reduction • Parent Lacks Time and/or Energy (21) • “When I need time to get something done.” • “I’d have to be awake & “on” a lot sooner in the morning, that would be hard because I’m sleepy when I get up.” • Child Demands TV (7) • “Them wanting to watch and having a battle of wills - that would be hard.” • No Alternative (6) • No Challenges (3) • Reduction in Family Time (1)

  9. One More Finding… • Four parents volunteered that they had recently significantly reduced TV by moving the television set to a less prominent location. • “The TV is down in the basement so it’s not in their face all the time. If they don’t see it, they don’t want to watch it as much.”

  10. Limitations • No interview transcripts • Small sample size • Recruitment bias based on advertising of “Kids & TV Study”

  11. Conclusions • Parent stress level and perceived need to use the TV to occupy the child may be a more important factor in determining how much a child watches than the parent’s beliefs about TV. • Interventions to reduce TV may need to address parental stress to be successful. • Additional research should be conducted to determine the role of TV location.

  12. Thank you! • Fred Zimmerman, PhD • Dimitri Christakis, MD MPH • Lyn Bassett • The Study Parents & Kids • Karen & Mom • The ’06 MCH cohort This work was funded by a grant from the US Department of Health and Human Services, Health Resources and Services Administration’s Maternal and Child Health Bureau (Title V, Social Security Act), grant # T76MC00011-21-00.

  13. Questions?

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