Abstract

Screen time is negatively associated with markers of health in western youth, but very little is known about these relationships in Chinese youth. Middle-school and high-school students (n = 2625) in Wuhan, China, completed questionnaires assessing demographics, health behaviors, and self-perceptions in spring/summer 2016. Linear and logistic regression analyses were conducted to determine whether, after adjustment for covariates, screen time was associated with body mass index (BMI), eating behaviors, average nightly hours of sleep, physical activity (PA), academic performance, and psychological states. Watching television on school days was negatively associated with academic performance, PA, anxiety, and life satisfaction. Television viewing on non-school days was positively associated with sleep duration. Playing electronic games was positively associated with snacking at night and less frequently eating breakfast, and negatively associated with sleep duration and self-esteem. Receiving electronic news and study materials on non-school days was negatively associated with PA, but on school days, was positively associated with anxiety. Using social networking sites was negatively associated with academic performance, but positively associated with BMI z-score, PA and anxiety. Screen time in adolescents is associated with unhealthy behaviors and undesirable psychological states that can contribute to poor quality of life.

Highlights

  • Healthy behaviors are learned in adolescence [1]

  • We found that for Chinese adolescents, more time spent watching television, on social networking sites, and videos may be negatively associated with academic performance; the association between academic performance and receiving news and study materials from electronic devices was not statistically significant

  • We found that watching television on school days and getting electronic news or study materials on non-school days were negatively associated with physical activity (PA), perhaps because of displacement of other activities

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Summary

Objectives

The aim of this study was to determine the amount of time adolescents in Wuhan, China, spent on screen-based behaviors, and the associations of this with adiposity, unhealthy eating behaviors, sleep, PA, academic performance, anxiety, self-esteem, and life satisfaction

Methods
Results
Conclusion
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