Doctors Advise No TV in Teenagers Bedrooms
Two questions that doctors are being encouraged to ask teenage patients:
1. How much time do you spend daily with entertainment media?
2. Is there a TV set or Internet access in your bedroom?
Hmmmm. Perhaps these are important influences to consider.
The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) just released (August 30, 2010) their brand new study titled, "Sexuality, Contraception, and the Media." This report examines media messages teenagers are absorbing and how those influences affect their well being. In other words... when kids watch the music video for the #2 song Teenage Dream and watch Katy Perry getting her clothes torn off by a guy... does that really affect our kids? That's what the AAP sought to discover.
The results of this study? Pretty scary. (I'll definitely be including some of this in my upcoming parent workshops.)
Here are some of the elements that jumped out at me:
More than 75% of prime-time programs contain sexual content.
Only 14% of these incidents mention any risks or responsibilities of sexual activity.
Talk about sex on TV can occur as often as 8 to 10 times per hour.
Between 1997 and 2001 alone, the amount of sexual content on TV nearly doubled.
American media makes sex seem like a harmless sport in which everyone engages, and results of considerable research have indicated that the media can have a major effect on young people's attitudes and behaviors.
The media may function as a "superpeer" in convincing adolescents that sexual activity is a normative behavior for young teenagers.
Listening to sexually degrading lyrics is associated with earlier sexual intercourse.
Out of nine longitudinal studies seeking to answer whether sexy media contributes to early sexual activity, seven of these studies have shown that exposure to sexual content in TV and other media in early adolescence can as much as double the risk of early sexual intercourse.
Early exposure to sexual content doubled the risk of teen pregnancy.
Bedroom TVs are associated with greater substance use and sexual activity by teenagers.
They summarized their findings well: "Clearly, the media play a major role in determining whether certain teenagers become sexually active earlier rather than later."
The good news from the report:
Teenagers whose parents control their TV-viewing habits are less sexually experienced
Adolescents whose parents limit their TV-viewing are less likely to engage in early sex.
The messages from this report are loud and clear. Media affects our kids. So parents, help your kids make good media decisions. Pretty simple.
The report actually words it like this: Pediatricians should counsel parents to recognize the importance of the media, exert control over their children's media choices, keep their children's bedrooms free of TVs and Internet connections, and avoid letting their children see PG-13– and R-rated movies that are inappropriate for them.
Interesting that someone is finally chiming in about PG-13 movies.
This isn't the AAP's first report on the subject. Last year the AAP released similar reports on the effects of sex and violence in the media. We wrote a Youth Culture Window article detailing the results of those reports, urging parents to monitor their kids' media and help them make good media choices. This month's AAP report conveys much of the same, but with even more current data revealing exactly how dire the situation is becoming.
Sunday, September 19, 2010
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