The Differential Impact of Screen Time on Children’s Wellbeing
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. The Participants
2.2. Procedures and Measures
2.3. Data Processing
2.4. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Summary Statistics
3.2. Interaction Effect of Leisure Screen Time and Gender on Overall Wellbeing, Controlling for BMI: Two Way-ANCOVA
3.2.1. Leisure Screen Time Threshold Differences in Wellbeing, Controlling for BMI: One-Way MANCOVA
3.2.2. Gender, Controlling for BMI Differences in Wellbeing: One-Way MANCOVA
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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<1 h | <2 h | 1–3 h | 3+ h | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Overall | 22.10% | 69.60% | 70% | 7.90% |
Male | 16.70% | 65% | 73.40% | 9.90% |
Female | 28.10% | 74.70% | 66.30% | 5.60% |
Screen Time | <2 h | 2 h + | |
---|---|---|---|
Physical | M (SD) | 52.35 (8.80) | 48.73 (8.22) |
Madj (SE) | 52.36 (0.33) | 48.73 (0.61) | |
Psychological | M (SD) | 38.05 (3.46) | 37.66 (4.41) |
Madj (SE) | 38.05 (0.14) | 37.65 (0.26) | |
Parental | M (SD) | 51.39 (10.10) | 48.02 (9.39) |
Madj (SE) | 51.38 (0.37) | 48.03 (0.70) | |
School | M (SD) | 55.66 (9.64) | 52.33 (10.02) |
Madj (SE) | 55.66 (0.37) | 52.34 (0.69) | |
Peers | M (SD) | 54.32 (9.73) | 51.90 (10.81) |
Madj (SE) | 54.32 (0.38) | 51.91 (0.70) |
Differences in Adjusted Means (95% CI) | ||
---|---|---|
Wellbeing Dimension | <2 h vs. 2+ h | Girls vs. Boys |
Physical | 3.63 [2.267, 4.991] * | 0.044 [1.113, 1.200] |
Psychological | 0.396 [0.183, 0.976] | 0.398 [0.086, 0.883] |
Parental | 3.35 [1.793, 4.912] * | 0.521 [0.796, 1.837] |
School | 3.317 [1.790, 4.844] * | 3.370 [2.1, 4.641] * |
Peers | 2.41 [0.845, 3.978] * | 1.972 [0.662, 3.283] * |
Girls | Boys | ||
---|---|---|---|
Physical | M (SD) | 51.56 (8.98) | 51.52 (8.64) |
Madj (SE) | 51.56 (0.43) | 51.52 (0.41) | |
Psychological | M (SD) | 38.17 (3.13) | 37.77 (4.14) |
Madj (SE) | 38.17 (0.18) | 37.77 (0.17) | |
Parental | M (SD) | 50.90 (10.12) | 50.38 (9.94) |
Madj (SE) | 50.9 (0.49) | 50.38 (0.46) | |
School | M (SD) | 56.69 (9.19) | 53.31 (10.1) |
Madj (SE) | 56.69 (0.47) | 53.32 (0.45) | |
Peers | M (SD) | 54.81 (9.88) | 52.84 (10.03) |
Madj (SE) | 54.81 (0.48) | 52.84 (0.46) |
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Belton, S.; Issartel, J.; Behan, S.; Goss, H.; Peers, C. The Differential Impact of Screen Time on Children’s Wellbeing. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 9143. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18179143
Belton S, Issartel J, Behan S, Goss H, Peers C. The Differential Impact of Screen Time on Children’s Wellbeing. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(17):9143. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18179143
Chicago/Turabian StyleBelton, Sarahjane, Johann Issartel, Stephen Behan, Hannah Goss, and Cameron Peers. 2021. "The Differential Impact of Screen Time on Children’s Wellbeing" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 17: 9143. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18179143
APA StyleBelton, S., Issartel, J., Behan, S., Goss, H., & Peers, C. (2021). The Differential Impact of Screen Time on Children’s Wellbeing. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(17), 9143. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18179143