“Our findings may help inform public health guidelines that consider different forms of screen use in prevention of mental health disorders in children and youth during the pandemic,” said researchers, including Xuedi Li from the Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto.

For the study, published in the journal JAMA Network Open, the team included 2,026 children to determine whether specific forms of screen use were associated with symptoms of depression, anxiety, conduct problems, irritability, hyperactivity and inattention in children and youth during Covid-19.

Advertisement

A longitudinal cohort study with repeated measures of exposures and outcomes was conducted in children and youth aged 2 to 18 years in Ontario, Canada, between May 2020 and April 2021 across 4 cohorts of children or youth: 2 community cohorts and 2 clinically referred cohorts.

Parents were asked to complete repeated questionnaires about their children’s health behaviors and mental health symptoms during Covid-19.

The research also suggests that policy intervention as well as evidence-informed social supports are needed to promote healthful screen use and mental health in children and youth during the pandemic and beyond.

Source: IANS

Source:

You May Also Like

I Tried the French Onion Soup at 4 Popular Chains & the Best Was Rich, Gooey Perfection

There’s something undeniably comforting about hearty soups during the chill of winter,…

How Walking 10K Steps a Day Affects Your Body

Achieving the 10,000-steps-a-day benchmark has become a common fitness goal—and for good…

How Many Pull-Ups Signal Excellent Upper-Body Strength?

Pull-ups have long been hailed as the ultimate test of upper-body strength…

5 Quick Workouts To Stay Lean & Fit as You Age

Staying lean and fit becomes increasingly important as you age. Your metabolism…