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Exposing the Damage: TV and Kids
Mark Brandenburg MA, CPCC
There are millions of young children in this country who are being
horribly mistreated by their parents.
These parents aren't physically abusing their young children, and
they may not even know that they're mistreating them.
The mistreatment?
Millions of kids under the age of two are watching TV in this country.
In fact, according to a study by the Kaiser Family Foundation of
over 1,000 parents, about 65% of kids under age two are watching
TV, and they're averaging over two hours of watching a day.
They're watching even though the American Academy of Pediatrics
recommends no TV for kids under age two. They're watching even though
this is a crucial period for their cognitive development, at an
age when their brains are still being formed.
And the news for these kids just got worse.
Scientists at Children's Hospital & Regional Medical Center
in Seattle who studied over 2,500 children found a link between
early TV watching
and attention problems at a later age.
Specifically, the chances of one and three-year-old kids developing
attention problems at age seven increased by 10% for every hour
of TV watched each
day.
The information from these two studies creates a chilling picture
of what's happening to millions of toddlers in this country. It's
unfair, immoral, and unjust, and it needs to be addressed.
But you won't see an outcry from the mass media giants in this
country. You see, we live in the country where "Why TV is Good
for Kids" appeared as the cover story in Newsweek Magazine
in 2002. The same Newsweek Magazine that's owned by the Washington
Post Company, which owns a sprawling
cable company and six broadcast stations around the country.
No, you won't hear too much about these important studies from
the Time-Warners of the world. Bad for business, you see.
But if you're the parent of a young child, you need to know this
information.
There are about nine million children who take prescription medication
for ADHD in this country. The number of kids who take ADHD medication
has
been doubling every two years. And while TV certainly isn't the
culprit in all of these cases, the link between the number of attention
problems and the amount of TV watched is undeniable.
The days of the "harmless" argument for TV and kids needs
to be put to rest. Parents need to be educated about the very real
possibility of causing future attention problems with their kids.
And young kids across this country need to be given a fighting
chance.
Mark Brandenburg MA, CPCC, coaches men to be better fathers and
husbands. He is the author of "25 Secrets of Emotionally Intelligent
Fathers"
http://www.markbrandenburg.com/father.htm.
Sign up for his FREE bi-weekly newsletter, "Dads, Don't Fix
Your Kids," at http://www.markbrandenburg.com.
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