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Journal Article

Citation

Hardy LL, Baur LA, Garnett SP, Crawford D, Campbell KJ, Shrewsbury VA, Cowell CT, Salmon J. Int. J. Behav. Nutr. Phys. Act. 2006; 3(1): 24.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2006, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group - BMC)

DOI

10.1186/1479-5868-3-24

PMID

16961929

PMCID

PMC1594572

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Few young people meet television viewing guidelines. Purpose: To determine the association between factors in the family and home environment and watching television, including videos and DVDs, in early adolescence. METHODS: Cross-sectional, self-report survey of 343 adolescents aged 12-13 years (173 girls), and their parents (338 mothers, 293 fathers). Main measures were factors in the family and home environment potentially associated with adolescents spending [greater than or equal to]2 hours per day in front of the television. Factors examined included family structure, opportunities to watch television/video/DVDs, perceptions of rules and regulations on television viewing, and television viewing practices. RESULTS: Two-thirds of adolescents watched [greater than or equal to]2 hours television per day. Factors in the family and home environment associated with adolescents watching television [greater than or equal to]2 hours per day include adolescents who have siblings (Adjusted Odds Ratio [95%CI] AOR = 3.0 [1.2, 7.8]); access to pay television (AOR = 2.0 [1.1, 3.7]); ate snacks while watching television (AOR = 3.1 [1.8, 5.4]); co-viewed television with parents (AOR = 2.3 [1.3, 4.2]); and had mothers who watched [greater than or equal to]2 hours television per day (AOR = 2.4 [1.3, 4.6]). CONCLUSIONS: There are factors in the family and home environment that influence the volume of television viewed by 12-13 year olds. Television plays a central role in the family environment, potentially providing a means of recreation among families of young adolescents for little cost. Interventions which target family television viewing practices and those of parents, in particular, are more likely to be effective than interventions which directly target adolescent viewing times.


Language: en

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