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Electronic Devices as Correlates of Sedentary Behavior and Screen Time Among Diverse Low-Income Adolescents During the School Year and Summer Time

Excessive screen time among adolescents increases risk for overweight and obesity. Having electronic devices in the adolescent’s bedroom is associated with more screen time. The present study expanded on previous studies by also examining portable personal electronic devices and social media members...

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Autores principales: Sallis, James F., Conway, Terry L., Cain, Kelli L., Geremia, Carrie, Bonilla, Edith, Spoon, Chad
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JHEAL 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10544927/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37790138
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author Sallis, James F.
Conway, Terry L.
Cain, Kelli L.
Geremia, Carrie
Bonilla, Edith
Spoon, Chad
author_facet Sallis, James F.
Conway, Terry L.
Cain, Kelli L.
Geremia, Carrie
Bonilla, Edith
Spoon, Chad
author_sort Sallis, James F.
collection PubMed
description Excessive screen time among adolescents increases risk for overweight and obesity. Having electronic devices in the adolescent’s bedroom is associated with more screen time. The present study expanded on previous studies by also examining portable personal electronic devices and social media membership as correlates of screen time use and total sedentary time in the school year and summer among diverse low-income adolescents. Adolescents aged 10–17 years were recruited from lower-income areas; n=150 (34 African Americans, 23 American Indians, 16 Asian/Pacific Islanders, 39 Latinos, and 38 White/non-Hispanics) completed surveys and wore accelerometers in both the school year and summer. Total sedentary time was computed from accelerometers. Recreational screen time was assessed with a 3-item validated scale. Adolescents reported the presence of 6 electronic devices in their bedrooms, ownership of 4 portable devices, and social media membership. General linear modeling was conducted for both time periods, with demographic covariates and interactions with sex and race/ethnicity. More electronic devices in bedrooms were related to more screen time during the school year and summer, and to more total sedentary time in summer. Personal electronics were related only to more screen time in the school year. Social media membership was related to more total sedentary time in summer, but only among African Americans, American Indians, and non-Hispanic Whites. Electronic devices in bedrooms was confirmed as a risk factor for sedentary behavior among low-income adolescents of color. Social media membership and use should be further studied with diverse adolescents.
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spelling pubmed-105449272023-10-03 Electronic Devices as Correlates of Sedentary Behavior and Screen Time Among Diverse Low-Income Adolescents During the School Year and Summer Time Sallis, James F. Conway, Terry L. Cain, Kelli L. Geremia, Carrie Bonilla, Edith Spoon, Chad J Healthy Eat Act Living Peer Reviewed Research Excessive screen time among adolescents increases risk for overweight and obesity. Having electronic devices in the adolescent’s bedroom is associated with more screen time. The present study expanded on previous studies by also examining portable personal electronic devices and social media membership as correlates of screen time use and total sedentary time in the school year and summer among diverse low-income adolescents. Adolescents aged 10–17 years were recruited from lower-income areas; n=150 (34 African Americans, 23 American Indians, 16 Asian/Pacific Islanders, 39 Latinos, and 38 White/non-Hispanics) completed surveys and wore accelerometers in both the school year and summer. Total sedentary time was computed from accelerometers. Recreational screen time was assessed with a 3-item validated scale. Adolescents reported the presence of 6 electronic devices in their bedrooms, ownership of 4 portable devices, and social media membership. General linear modeling was conducted for both time periods, with demographic covariates and interactions with sex and race/ethnicity. More electronic devices in bedrooms were related to more screen time during the school year and summer, and to more total sedentary time in summer. Personal electronics were related only to more screen time in the school year. Social media membership was related to more total sedentary time in summer, but only among African Americans, American Indians, and non-Hispanic Whites. Electronic devices in bedrooms was confirmed as a risk factor for sedentary behavior among low-income adolescents of color. Social media membership and use should be further studied with diverse adolescents. JHEAL 2020-12-01 /pmc/articles/PMC10544927/ /pubmed/37790138 Text en © JHEAL, 2020 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0).
spellingShingle Peer Reviewed Research
Sallis, James F.
Conway, Terry L.
Cain, Kelli L.
Geremia, Carrie
Bonilla, Edith
Spoon, Chad
Electronic Devices as Correlates of Sedentary Behavior and Screen Time Among Diverse Low-Income Adolescents During the School Year and Summer Time
title Electronic Devices as Correlates of Sedentary Behavior and Screen Time Among Diverse Low-Income Adolescents During the School Year and Summer Time
title_full Electronic Devices as Correlates of Sedentary Behavior and Screen Time Among Diverse Low-Income Adolescents During the School Year and Summer Time
title_fullStr Electronic Devices as Correlates of Sedentary Behavior and Screen Time Among Diverse Low-Income Adolescents During the School Year and Summer Time
title_full_unstemmed Electronic Devices as Correlates of Sedentary Behavior and Screen Time Among Diverse Low-Income Adolescents During the School Year and Summer Time
title_short Electronic Devices as Correlates of Sedentary Behavior and Screen Time Among Diverse Low-Income Adolescents During the School Year and Summer Time
title_sort electronic devices as correlates of sedentary behavior and screen time among diverse low-income adolescents during the school year and summer time
topic Peer Reviewed Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10544927/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37790138
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