Abstract

Young children’s digital media use and physical activity have gained attention in recent research. Parental co-participation has a major impact on children’s health consequences. This study addressed a gap in the research by investigating daily parental co-participation in children’s digital media use and physical play, using the family ecological model theoretical framework. The participants in this nationally representative cross-sectional study were 2512 Finnish parents with two- to six-year-old children. Parents completed a questionnaire. Sociodemographic correlates of co-participation and of the awareness of guidelines regarding co-participation and correlation between co-participation in digital media use and physical play were analysed. Parental co-participation in physical play and digital media use correlated positively. Lower parental age, male parental gender, Finnish and Swedish languages, a fewer number of children, and a male child gender were associated with more co-participation in one or both activities, and parental female gender and low family income were associated with more awareness. The awareness of guidelines was not associated with co-participation in digital media use. There were sociodemographic differences in parental co-participation. From a health counselling perspective, parents may benefit from national recommendations on digital media use and physical activity, but adherence to guidelines depends on the family context.

Highlights

  • IntroductionChildhood is a foundational period of life for the development of health behaviours [1,2]

  • The aim of this study was to examine, first, how much time on weekdays and weekends children spend on digital media use (DMU) and on outdoor physical play and how much parents actively co-participate in these daily activities

  • There were no significant differences in parental co-participation based on educational or income level or residential environment

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Summary

Introduction

Childhood is a foundational period of life for the development of health behaviours [1,2]. Regular physical activity (PA) has favourable health effects in young children [3,4], and PA habits established in early childhood track in later childhood [5,6] and, subsequently, in adolescence and adulthood [7]. Sedentary behaviour habits tend to track from childhood to later life [6,8,9]. Children’s PA does not reach the recommended daily level [10], and obesity deriving from sedentary behaviours of the western lifestyle has been considered a major threat to health during childhood [11,12,13]

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