Adolescents' screen time, sleep and mental health: literature review

20 Feb 2020 03:30 PM

Systematic review summarising the published experimental and longitudinal evidence on adolescent screen time, sleep and mental health.

Summary

The objective of this systematic review was to summarise the published experimental and longitudinal evidence on adolescent mobile device screen time or use, and the association with sleep and mental health and wellbeing. Five research questions guided this review which included evidence from quantitative and qualitative studies conducted in Western countries classified as high-income by the World Bank.

Key findings

To what extent does adolescents' mobile device screen time impact on sleep outcomes?

What are the potential causal mechanisms through which mobile device screen time affects sleep outcomes amongst adolescents?

What are the implications of the potential impact of mobile device screen time on sleep for adolescents' mental health and wellbeing?

To what extent might girls' and boys' differential mobile device screen time, and its relationship with sleep, contribute to inequalities in mental health and wellbeing by gender?

What existing evidence is there on adolescents' views of how mobile device screen time affects their sleep, and following on from this, their mental health and wellbeing?

Recommendations

Policy and practice initiatives could target all or a combination of the identified modifiable factors within the causal pathway between mobile device screen exposures and impaired sleep, but the current evidence severely limits the recommendations that can be made. Only one study provided suitable data to explore potential causal mechanisms through which mobile device exposure influences sleep outcomes. It suggests:

Further research investigating the causal relationship between mobile device screen use, impaired sleep and mental health and wellbeing is needed. Therefore, future research studies should use multiple time points of mobile device screen use, sleep and mental health data.

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