Health

Digital media recommendations for kids updated by U.S. doctors

Parents encouraged to feel like media role models who can make decisions for their kids and help them recognize the risks and benefits of media use, U.S. pediatricians say.

Make media selection more mindful, U.S. pediatricians suggest

Young children shouldn't be left alone when they're engaging with digital media or television, pediatricians advise. (Dave Zapotosky/The Blade/Associated Press)

The quantity and quality of media children and teens consume should change with their age, according to new guidelines from the American Academy of Pediatrics.

The organization also says parents should oversee children's media consumption and educate them about proper media engagement.

"The big picture message is that parents have a huge role to play as guides and mentors for their young children about what technology means," said Dr. Jenny Radesky, who led the crafting of the new guidelines for young children.

For example, she said, what are people supposed to do with tech gear and devices? How should those gears and devices be used to improve people's lives, and help them learn and build relationships?

"In order for kids to grow up with a healthy concept of what digital tools are and how to use them effectively, creatively, and kindly, we need to teach them this — both explicitly (in what we teach them) and implicitly (through role modeling our own behavior) from the very start," said Radesky, of the University of Michigan C.S. Mott Children's Hospital in Ann Arbor.

A doctor who crafted new guidelines on media use for young children recommends Sesame Workshop content. (Beth A. Keiser/Associated Press)

The new recommendations call for infants to avoid media — except for video-chatting — when they are younger than 18 to 24 months. After those ages, they may be exposed to it, but the content should be high-quality. Also, young children shouldn't be left alone when they're engaging with digital media or television.

There is no evidence that media use benefits infants, but there is evidence that it is linked with poor sleep, obesity risk and poor developmental outcomes, said Radesky in an email to Reuters Health.

1 hour limit recommended for pre-schoolers

As for choosing high-quality media, she said parents should trust their instincts and pay attention to how their children respond to programs and apps. Also, she recommends Common Sense Media () as a guide for how to use technology among families and Sesame Workshop for content.

For preschool-aged children, the guidelines recommend limiting screen use to one hour per day of high-quality programming.

The guidelines are a bit looser for older children and teens, but the organization says media shouldn't take the place of other needs like sleep and physical activity. Also, the recommendations call for parents to select and co-view media with their children. They should also teach their children about online safety.

"Parents are back in the driver's seat," said Dr. Megan Moreno, who led the crafting of the new media guidelines for school-aged children. "We want parents to feel that they are media role models. They can make decisions for their kids and help them recognize the risks and benefits of media use."

The American Academy of Pediatrics has a new tool to help families develop and follow a Family Media Use plan. The plan should decide the type and quantity of media children consume, with a focus on healthy habits and communication of guidelines to other caregivers like babysitters.

"The hope is that media selection becomes much more mindful and families are talking about the quantity and quality of the media that they use," said Moreno, of Seattle Children's.

The new statements were published in the journal Pediatrics to coincide with the annual American Academy of Pediatrics conference in San Francisco.