Top Five Reasons to Limit Your Screen Time

By Sharon Hodge

Top Five Reasons to Limit Your Screen Time


By: Sharon Hodge

Lesson Plan Guide: Recognize, Record, and Reduce Screen Time


You’ve probably already heard that too much screen time is bad for you and that it is important
to unplug from your digital devices. But you might be wondering how much is too much, and
what is the harm, really? With many schools incorporating tablets into academic work, the time
spent on screens of all types—smart phones, tablets, video games and TV—can add up quickly
and stealthily.


The Internet Trends 2014 report found that the average American (aged 16-44) spends 444
minutes or 7.4 hours staring at screens every day. That’s 147 minutes of television, 103 minutes
on a computer, 151 minutes with smart phones, and 43 minutes on a tablet.  The
American Academy of Pediatrics has long recommended that screen time for kids and teens be
limited to two hours a day, yet 2014 surveys by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention that did not ask teens about the use of smart phones found that 75 percent of 12- to-
15-year-olds spent at least two hours a day watching TV and using a computer; 15 percent
watched TV four or more hours daily, and 12 percent used their computer for four or more
hours.


What is all that screen time adding up to? Plenty of concern for parents and pediatricians. If you
need a reason to get serious about setting limits on your own screen time to improve your
physical and mental well-being, here are five negative effects too much screen time could be
having on you.


● Reduced fitness:

More time sitting in front of a screen means less physical activity. Excessive
screen time has been linked to obesity, elevated blood pressure and higher cholesterol.
A 2010 study of teens in the American Journal of Epidemiology, found that teens who
spent the most time in front of a screen had the greatest increase in body fat.


● Sleep disturbance:

The more time teens spend on screens of any type throughout the day, the less
they sleep, found a study of 9,846 teens in Norway published in February in the journal
BMJ Open. Those using electronics for more than 4 hours were 49 percent more likely to
take longer than an hour to fall asleep compared with those who used their devices less,
researchers said. Teens who spent more than 2 hours emailing or chatting online were
more than three times as likely to get less than 5 hours’ sleep compared with those who
had less screen time.

● Emotional costs:

From videogame and internet addictions to a decreased ability to read emotions
and reduced attachment to parents, and avoidance of face-to-face communications, the
effects of too much screen time are varied and far-reaching. Teachers and principals
have reported having difficulty getting students to engage in team assignments, finding
that the teens would rather engage with a computer screen.


● Brain damage:

Neuroimaging shows that too much screen time damages the brain. Without
getting into the details of “gray matter atrophy” and other scientific terms, the research is
pretty clear and is summed up by Dr. Victoria L. Dunckley in a 2014 post on
Psychologytoday.com: “In short, excessive screen-time appears to impair brain structure
and function. Much of the damage occurs in the brain’s frontal lobe, which undergoes
massive changes from puberty until the mid-twenties. Frontal lobe development, in turn,
largely determines success in every area of life—from sense of well-being to academic
or career success to relationship skills. …”


● Eye strain:

“No one knows for sure at this point if prolonged use of digital devices actually
causes permanent damage to the eyes, but it’s well established that it causes eye strain
and discomfort,” says Gary Heiting, OD, senior editor of AllAboutVision.com. A 2015
report from The Vision Council found that 61 percent of Americans have experienced
such eye strain.


Now armed with some compelling reasons to ditch the digital overload and engage with
the people and environment around you, talk to your parents and friends about ways to limit
screen time. Plan accountability strategies that will work for you. Many tablets and smart phones
have settings to limit use, and there are apps that can be installed to do the same.

About the Author

Sharon Hodge