Arab Times

‘Too much screen time, too little sleep for kids’

Sleep may impact grades

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PARIS, Sept 27, (Agencies): Only one in 20 kids in the United States meets guidelines on sleep, exercise and screen time, and nearly a third are outside recommenda­tions for all three, according to a study published Thursday.

On average, children aged eight to 11 spent 3.6 hours per day glued to a TV, mobile phone, tablet or computer screen, nearly double the suggested limit of two hours, researcher­s found.

Too little sleep and excess screen time were clearly linked to a drop off in cognitive skills, such as language ability, memory, and task completion, they reported in The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health.

“We found that more than two hours of recreation­al screen time in children was associated with poorer cognitive developmen­t,” said lead author Jeremy Walsh, a researcher at the Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario Research Institute.

“Based on our findings, paediatric­ians, parents, educators and policymake­rs should promote limiting recreation screen time and prioritisi­ng healthy sleep routines during childhood and adolescenc­e.”

Walsh and his team looked at data – based on detailed questionna­ires – for 4,520 children spread across 20 locations in the United States.

They also tested the kids for six kinds of cognitive skills, adjusting the results for household income, puberty developmen­t and other factors that might affect performanc­e.

The results were measured against the Canadian 24-hour Movement Guidelines for children.

For sleep and exercise, the recommenda­tions align with those of the World Health Organizati­on, but Canada is the first country to propose limits for time spent in front of a back-lit screen.

Activity

Nearly 30 percent of children failed to meet any of the recommenda­tions, more than 40 percent met only one, a quarter met two, and only five percent conformed to all three.

Half the kids were getting enough sleep, 37 percent remained within the screen-time limits, and only 18 percent met the physical activity recommenda­tion.

“The more individual recommenda­tions the child met, the better their cognition,” the study concluded, noting that screen time was the most important factor.

In contrast to earlier research, lack of exercise did not correlate with poorer performanc­e on the cognition tests.

The strong link between time spent staring at a screen and brain function “potentiall­y reflect the interrupti­on of the stress-recovery cycle needed for growth in children,” commented Eduardo Esteban Bustamante, an assistant professor at the University of Illinois’ College of Applied Health Sciences who did not take part in the study.

“Each minute spent on screens necessaril­y displaces a minute from sleep.”

Scientists and educators have grown increasing­ly concerned that constant use of mobile phones from an early age may lead to problems ranging from addiction to attention deficit disorder.

The vast majority of teachers in a recent survey said that smartphone­s had become a distractio­n in the classroom, eroding the ability of students to focus.

France urges parents not to allow children under three to watch TV, and American paediatric­ians also favour a total ban on screen time until at least 18 months.

College students who want good grades may want to skip the allnighter­s and avoid picking earlymorni­ng classes because a new study suggests lack of sleep is at least as bad for academic success as binge drinking or doing drugs.

Each night of the week that college students have sleep problems was associated with a 0.02-point drop in their cumulative grade point average (GPA) and 10 percent higher odds that they would drop a course.

“Someone who is routinely well rested has a 0.14 GPA advantage over someone perpetuall­y sleepy,” said study co-author J. Roxanne Prichard, scientific director of the Center for College Sleep at the University of St Thomas in Saint Paul, Minnesota.

This could be the difference between getting Latin honors, or maintainin­g eligibilit­y to play sports, or getting into medical school, Prichard said by email.

“When you’re approachin­g school work well rested, you can accomplish work and complex problem solving much more efficientl­y,” Prichard added. “Complicati­ng this, is that when you’re sleep deprived, you’re more likely to experience feelings of anxiety, depression, as well as physical illness, all of which can impair your effectiven­ess as a student.”

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