Smartphones not a barrier to healthy parenting: Study

Smartphones not a barrier to healthy parenting: Study
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Smartphones not a barrier to healthy parenting: Study

Highlights

Parents may worry that spending time on their smartphones has a negative impact on their relationships with their children, however, a new study found that this is unlikely to be the case.

Sydney: Parents may worry that spending time on their smartphones has a negative impact on their relationships with their children, however, a new study found that this is unlikely to be the case.

"The challenge with much of the technology-family literature is that has mainly stemmed from an assumption of risk and problems. As a result, small and uneven findings can become the focus of media, policymakers, and parents," said study lead author Kathryn Modecki from the Griffith University in Australia.

In the analysis of data from 3,659 parent-based surveys, the authors tested 84 different possibilities to assess whether smartphone use was associated with parenting, and they found little evidence.

For the study, published in the Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, the research team explored whether the effect of phone use on parenting depended on whether it displaced time with family and was associated with family conflict.

At low levels of displacing time with family, more smartphone use was associated with better (not worse) parenting.

The authors noted that especially considering diverse family environments, smartphones play multiple roles in family life, and when not heavily impacting on family time, may have a positive role in parenting.

"This is an issue because it can cloud our insight as we focus on ways to meaningfully assist parents and families to enhance positive outcomes," said Modecki.

Thus, the research team used a transparent approach that mapped a myriad of ways that smartphones could link to family wellbeing.

"We found very little evidence of problems and hope these data help move us towards more constructive and nuanced conversations around families' diverse experiences with technology, actual risks associated with parenting, and where we can best support," Modecki said.

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