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Electronic media use and sleep in children and adolescents in western countries: a systematic review

机译:西方国家儿童和青少年的电子媒体使用和睡眠:系统评价

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Sleep is essential for child and adolescent health and well-being. There is an increasing interest in whether electronic media use affects children and young adolescents’ sleep. Prior reviews have focused on a school-aged population. Moreover, it is crucial that research continuously addresses the processes of technology and media use and the implication on sleep. This systematic review examines the evidence of electronic media use related to sleep among 0–15-year-olds. Searches were carried out in four databases (CINAHL, Web of Science, EMBASE, and Medline). Inclusion criteria included age?≤?15?years, and intervention, cohort, or cross-sectional studies from western countries. Methodological quality was rated using the Quality Assessment Tool for Quantitative Studies by two independent reviewers. Data was extracted using a standardized data extraction form. Synthesis was done by summarizing results across studies by age groups of 0–5, 6–12, and 13–15?years within four sleep domains: Bedtime and sleep onset; Sleep quality; Sleep duration; Daytime tiredness. The search identified 10,719 unique studies, of which 109 fulfilled inclusion and exclusion criteria and were assessed for methodological quality. In total, 49 studies were included in the review. The study designs were randomized controlled trials (n?=?3), quasi-experimental studies (n?=?2), prospective cohort studies (n?=?15), and cross-sectional studies (n?=?29). Evidence for an association between electronic media use and sleep duration was identified, with stronger evidence for 6–15-years-olds than 0–5-year-olds. The evidence for a relationship between electronic media use and other sleep outcomes was more inconclusive. However, for 6–12-year-old children, there was evidence for associations of electronic media use with delayed bedtime and poor sleep quality. For 13–15-year-olds, there was evidence for associations between screen time and problems falling asleep, and between social media use and poor sleep quality. Overall, electronic media use was generally associated with shorter sleep duration in children and adolescents. Studies with stronger research design and of higher quality are needed to draw solid conclusions about electronic media’s impact on other sleep outcomes. Public awareness and interventions could be promoted about the potential negative impact on children’s sleep of electronic media devices that are used excessively and close to bedtime.
机译:睡眠对儿童和青少年健康和福祉至关重要。电子媒体使用是否影响儿童和年轻青少年的睡眠,越来越兴趣。此次评论的重点是学校年龄的人口。此外,重要的是,研究不断解决技术和媒体使用过程以及睡眠的含义。该系统审查审查了与0-15岁儿童睡眠相关的电子媒体使用的证据。搜索在四个数据库中进行(Cinahl,Science,Embase和Medline)。纳入标准包括年龄?≤≤15?年,以及西方国家的干预,队列或横断面研究。使用两个独立审查员的质量评估工具评估方法质量。使用标准化的数据提取形式提取数据。合成通过总结每组0-5,6-12和13-15岁的研究结果来完成的4个睡眠域内:睡前和睡眠状态;睡眠质量;睡眠时间;白天疲倦。该搜索确定了10,719项独特的研究,其中109个满足的包含和排除标准,并评估了方法质量。共有49项研究审查。研究设计是随机对照试验(N?=?3),准实验研究(n?=?2),前瞻性队列研究(n?=?15),以及横截面研究(n?=?29) 。确定了电子媒体使用与睡眠期间之间的关联的证据,以比0-5岁儿童的6-15岁,更强的证据。电子媒体使用与其他睡眠结果之间的关系的证据更不确定。然而,对于6-12岁的孩子,有证据表明电子媒体使用的延迟睡天和睡眠质量差。对于13-15岁,有证据表明屏幕时间和问题睡着的问题,社交媒体使用与睡眠质量差之间。总体而言,电子媒体使用通常与儿童和青少年的睡眠持续时间较短。需要采用更强的研究设计和更高质量的研究来吸引电子媒体对其他睡眠结果的影响。公众意识和干预措施可以促进对儿童电子媒体设备的潜在负面影响,这些电子媒体设备的睡眠过度和靠近睡前使用。

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