What limits should we set to children's exposure to new media?
As most parents know by now, the experts say we should limit our kids' screen time or risk raising socially stunted couch potatoes. Last autumn, the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) released guidelines for children and adolescents, recommending no more than two hours per day of any type of entertainment screen time for children aged three to 18, and none for those two or younger.
The guidelines cover the internet and texting as well as television, movies and video games.
As a science writer, I wondered how the AAP decided on that limit, which seems arbitrary and simplistic. As a mother raising a three-year-old and a six-year-old in a house full of glowing screens, I wondered, how would I ever enforce it?
Victor Strasburger, who is a professor of paediatrics at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque and an AAP spokesman, says the two-hour cut-off comes from several large studies that have followed the television-watching habits and health of children over decades.
"Over two hours per day, and the more time spent in front of a screen, the higher the risk of obesity," he says.
With more than two hours of screen time per day, children are more likely to experience a drop in school performance and increased aggression, Strasburger says.