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Parent-Perceived Benefits and Harms Associated With Internet Use by Adolescent Offspring

IMPORTANCE: Limited systematic information on familial factors and perception of the benefits and harms of internet use by youths is available. Much of the current research has been hampered by small nondiverse samples and limited information on key familial and offspring characteristics. OBJECTIVE:...

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Autores principales: Kimball, Harry Graff, Fernandez, Francesca, Moskowitz, Kathleen Anne, Kang, Minji, Alexander, Lindsay M., Conway, Kevin P., Merikangas, Kathleen Ries, Salum, Giovanni Abrahão, Milham, Michael Peter
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Medical Association 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10603534/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37883086
http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.39851
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author Kimball, Harry Graff
Fernandez, Francesca
Moskowitz, Kathleen Anne
Kang, Minji
Alexander, Lindsay M.
Conway, Kevin P.
Merikangas, Kathleen Ries
Salum, Giovanni Abrahão
Milham, Michael Peter
author_facet Kimball, Harry Graff
Fernandez, Francesca
Moskowitz, Kathleen Anne
Kang, Minji
Alexander, Lindsay M.
Conway, Kevin P.
Merikangas, Kathleen Ries
Salum, Giovanni Abrahão
Milham, Michael Peter
author_sort Kimball, Harry Graff
collection PubMed
description IMPORTANCE: Limited systematic information on familial factors and perception of the benefits and harms of internet use by youths is available. Much of the current research has been hampered by small nondiverse samples and limited information on key familial and offspring characteristics. OBJECTIVE: To characterize parental perceptions and concerns about internet use associated with adolescent development, well-being, safety, family connectedness, and potential for problematic internet use. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: A 20-minute, English-language survey was developed with expert stakeholders using previously validated questionnaires and was conducted online between June 17 and July 5, 2022. Participants included 1005 parents of children and adolescents aged 9 to 15 years drawn from an online digital survey platform and calibrated for representation with post hoc weightings. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Parent survey responses about family characteristics and internet use were used to compute Internet Addiction Test scores for parents and their offspring, Alabama Parenting Questionnaire scores, and an aggregate family connectedness score. RESULTS: The survey cohort of 1005 parents included 568 women (56.5%) and 437 men (43.5%) with a mean age (SD) of 39.5 (6.4) years. In terms of race and ethnicity, the most common categories included Black or African American (95 [9.5%]), Latinx or Hispanic (100 [10.0%]), White (602 [59.9%]), and 2 or more races or ethnicities (122 [12.1%]). Respondents endorsed parental concerns that included exposure to harmful content (646 [64.3%]) and online bullying (533 [53.0%]). Two hundred twenty-five parents (22.4%) had specific concerns about internet addiction in their adolescent offspring, and twice as many parents reported specific concerns about internet addiction than substance addiction. However, parents also indicated that internet use improved family connectedness among immediate families (468 [46.6%]) and extended families (568 [56.5%]). Internet Addiction Test scores in adolescent offspring were correlated with parent scores (β = 0.62 [SE = 0.02]; P < .001) and Alabama Parenting Questionnaire-Inconsistent Discipline scores (β = 0.23 [SE = 0.11]; P = .04). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: In this survey study of parent perceptions of internet use among adolescent offspring, parents believed the internet brought families closer yet also expressed concerns. Problematic internet use among youths was correlated with negative parenting styles and parent internet use. This research adds to the literature by suggesting that families, their communities, and industry may have common ground to collaborate on reducing the negative effects of internet use.
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spelling pubmed-106035342023-10-28 Parent-Perceived Benefits and Harms Associated With Internet Use by Adolescent Offspring Kimball, Harry Graff Fernandez, Francesca Moskowitz, Kathleen Anne Kang, Minji Alexander, Lindsay M. Conway, Kevin P. Merikangas, Kathleen Ries Salum, Giovanni Abrahão Milham, Michael Peter JAMA Netw Open Original Investigation IMPORTANCE: Limited systematic information on familial factors and perception of the benefits and harms of internet use by youths is available. Much of the current research has been hampered by small nondiverse samples and limited information on key familial and offspring characteristics. OBJECTIVE: To characterize parental perceptions and concerns about internet use associated with adolescent development, well-being, safety, family connectedness, and potential for problematic internet use. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: A 20-minute, English-language survey was developed with expert stakeholders using previously validated questionnaires and was conducted online between June 17 and July 5, 2022. Participants included 1005 parents of children and adolescents aged 9 to 15 years drawn from an online digital survey platform and calibrated for representation with post hoc weightings. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Parent survey responses about family characteristics and internet use were used to compute Internet Addiction Test scores for parents and their offspring, Alabama Parenting Questionnaire scores, and an aggregate family connectedness score. RESULTS: The survey cohort of 1005 parents included 568 women (56.5%) and 437 men (43.5%) with a mean age (SD) of 39.5 (6.4) years. In terms of race and ethnicity, the most common categories included Black or African American (95 [9.5%]), Latinx or Hispanic (100 [10.0%]), White (602 [59.9%]), and 2 or more races or ethnicities (122 [12.1%]). Respondents endorsed parental concerns that included exposure to harmful content (646 [64.3%]) and online bullying (533 [53.0%]). Two hundred twenty-five parents (22.4%) had specific concerns about internet addiction in their adolescent offspring, and twice as many parents reported specific concerns about internet addiction than substance addiction. However, parents also indicated that internet use improved family connectedness among immediate families (468 [46.6%]) and extended families (568 [56.5%]). Internet Addiction Test scores in adolescent offspring were correlated with parent scores (β = 0.62 [SE = 0.02]; P < .001) and Alabama Parenting Questionnaire-Inconsistent Discipline scores (β = 0.23 [SE = 0.11]; P = .04). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: In this survey study of parent perceptions of internet use among adolescent offspring, parents believed the internet brought families closer yet also expressed concerns. Problematic internet use among youths was correlated with negative parenting styles and parent internet use. This research adds to the literature by suggesting that families, their communities, and industry may have common ground to collaborate on reducing the negative effects of internet use. American Medical Association 2023-10-26 /pmc/articles/PMC10603534/ /pubmed/37883086 http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.39851 Text en Copyright 2023 Kimball HG et al. JAMA Network Open. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the CC-BY License.
spellingShingle Original Investigation
Kimball, Harry Graff
Fernandez, Francesca
Moskowitz, Kathleen Anne
Kang, Minji
Alexander, Lindsay M.
Conway, Kevin P.
Merikangas, Kathleen Ries
Salum, Giovanni Abrahão
Milham, Michael Peter
Parent-Perceived Benefits and Harms Associated With Internet Use by Adolescent Offspring
title Parent-Perceived Benefits and Harms Associated With Internet Use by Adolescent Offspring
title_full Parent-Perceived Benefits and Harms Associated With Internet Use by Adolescent Offspring
title_fullStr Parent-Perceived Benefits and Harms Associated With Internet Use by Adolescent Offspring
title_full_unstemmed Parent-Perceived Benefits and Harms Associated With Internet Use by Adolescent Offspring
title_short Parent-Perceived Benefits and Harms Associated With Internet Use by Adolescent Offspring
title_sort parent-perceived benefits and harms associated with internet use by adolescent offspring
topic Original Investigation
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10603534/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37883086
http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.39851
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