Conference paper
SCREEN TIME AND (BELGIAN) TEENAGERS
Nicolas Zdanowicz
; Université Catholique de Louvain, Psychosomatic Department, Mont-Godinne University Hospital, Yvoir, Belgium
Christine Reynaert
; Université Catholique de Louvain, Psychosomatic Department, Mont-Godinne University Hospital, Yvoir, Belgium
Denis Jacques
; Université Catholique de Louvain, Psychosomatic Department, Mont-Godinne University Hospital, Yvoir, Belgium
Brice Lepiece
; Université Catholique de Louvain, Psychosomatic Department, Mont-Godinne University Hospital, Yvoir, Belgium
Thomas Dubois
; Université Catholique de Louvain, Psychosomatic Department, Mont-Godinne University Hospital, Yvoir, Belgium
Abstract
Background: Parental anxiety about young people’s use of media has increased with the advent of Generation Alpha. Excessive
consumption is assumed to lead to a sedentary lifestyle, psychiatric disorders, overconsumption of sexual content and suicidal
behaviour. But are these assumptions valid?
Methods: We supplemented data from the 2014 Health Behaviour in School-aged Children Study for Belgium with a bibliographical
search of online databases (Medline, Scopus, PsycArticles, PsycInfo, PubMed) with the keywords ‘adolescent’ - ‘internet’
and ‘sedentarity’ or ‘suicide’ or ‘family’ or ‘sex*’ or ‘porno*’ for articles published between 2014 and 2019. We selected 27 original
research articles and/ or quantitative or qualitative meta-analyses.
Results: Total consumption of different media (television, video games, internet) remained stable until 2010, and significantly
increased in 2014. No parallel increase in sedentarity was reported. Controversy continues to surround the quantification of
overconsumption, and the definition of ‘problematic use’. Nevertheless, it appears that 5% of young people have unusual internet
use, and 97.5% of these meet the criteria for a mental disorder. The risk of overconsumption is related to four factors: familial,
personality, peer influence and supply. These general factors are supplemented by specific factors related to the abuse of sexual
content and suicidal behaviour. For the latter, specific risk factors are the same as for suicidal young people who are not influenced
by social media.
Conclusion: Even if screen time is higher for Generation Alpha, these young people are no more at risk unless they accumulate
risk factors. They are also exposed to challenges that researchers have not yet studied in any depth. One question relates to how they can manage their privacy if their parents published, without their consent, photographs of them as children? Another issue is their relationship to knowledge, given that everything they need to know can easily be found online.
Keywords
teenagers; internet; risk factor; Screen Time
Hrčak ID:
262358
URI
Publication date:
24.3.2020.
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