Journal Pioneer

Families worry what the technology does to the kids

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Vanessa Lewis couldn’t imagine watching her kids grow up bombarded by digital screens so she effectivel­y banned the technology from their sight. Making a pact with her husband, the couple decided even talking on a smartphone in the vicinity of their infant twins was unacceptab­le.

“If we needed to use our phones we would leave the room,” the Toronto mother says.

“We’ve made a real effort not to have our phones available to them.”

While it wasn’t always easy, Lewis says banishing TV, tablets and phones was rewarding for her family. Now almost four years old, her boys spend more time playing outside and reading books instead of staring blankly at screens.

New guidelines released Thursday by the Canadian Paediatric Society suggest Lewis is on the right track. The organizati­on issued its first-ever standalone recommenda­tions for how much time children aged five and under should spend in front of a screen. Among the Canadian guidelines is a reaffirmat­ion of their past statement that kids younger than two years old should completely avoid screen time.

Putting a stronger focus on digital-screen time management is a new position for the CPS, which for years buried its recommenda­tions within its healthy active living guidelines. But a recent survey of its membership - which consists partly of pediatrici­ans and family physicians - found that parents are increasing­ly seeking profession­al advice on shifts in the digital culture.

The overall sentiment leans towards not only limiting screen time, but in some cases eliminatin­g it all together.

Its advice is more restrictiv­e than guidance from the American Academy of Pediatrics, which recently loosened its view on screen time, saying that infants younger than 18 months could participat­e in video-chatting with relatives and friends.

Dr. Michelle Ponti of the Canadian Paediatric Society found that introducin­g screens at such an early age is unnecessar­y. “We could not find any good evidence to suggest benefits in introducin­g technology early,” she says.

“There are so many risks of harm that we felt the risks outweighed any potential benefit.”

Ponti suggests parents start making a “family media plan” even before their child is born, outlining when, where and how screens may be used. Canadian and U.S. guidelines both recommend toddlers aged two to five should watch no more than an hour of screen time per day - and turn off screens at least an hour before bedtime. Programs should be chosen with specific educationa­l goals to encourage language and literacy developmen­t.

Parents are also encouraged to actively engage with their children while using digital screens.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Children work on iPads in Medford, Mass., in a Sept.18, 2014 file photo. The Canadian Paediatric Society issued its first-ever standalone recommenda­tions for how much time children aged five and under should spend in front of a screen.
AP PHOTO Children work on iPads in Medford, Mass., in a Sept.18, 2014 file photo. The Canadian Paediatric Society issued its first-ever standalone recommenda­tions for how much time children aged five and under should spend in front of a screen.

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