Screen time, problematic screen use, and eating disorder symptoms among early adolescents: findings from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study
Male
RC620-627
Adolescent
Eating Disorders
Clinical Sciences
Adolescent health
Clinical sciences
Clinical and health psychology
Problematic screen use
Screen Time
Feeding and Eating Disorders
2.3 Psychological
Behavioral and Social Science
Psychology
Humans
Obesity
Prospective Studies
Nutritional diseases. Deficiency diseases
Child
Nutrition
Pediatric
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical and Health Psychology
Research
Paediatrics
Mental Illness
Screen time
Brain Disorders
Nutrition and dietetics
Clinical Psychology
Mental Health
Good Health and Well Being
Cross-Sectional Studies
Adolescent Behavior
Eating disorders
Women's Health
Mental health
Female
social and economic factors
Social Media
DOI:
10.1007/s40519-024-01685-1
Publication Date:
2024-09-04T17:02:11Z
AUTHORS (9)
ABSTRACT
Abstract
Purpose
Emerging research evidence suggests positive relationships between higher screen time and eating disorders. However, few studies have examined the prospective associations between screen use and eating disorder symptoms in early adolescents and how problematic screen use may contribute to symptom development.
Methods
We analyzed prospective cohort data from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (N = 10,246, 2016–2020, ages 9–14). Logistic regression analyses were used to estimate the longitudinal associations between baseline self-reported screen time and eating disorder symptoms in year two. Logistic regression analyses were also used to estimate cross-sectional associations between problematic screen use in year two (either problematic social media or mobile phone use) and eating disorder symptoms in year two. Eating disorder symptoms based on the Kiddie Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia (KSADS-5) included fear of weight gain, self-worth tied to weight, engaging in compensatory behaviors, binge eating, and distress with binge eating.
Results
Each additional hour of total screen time and social media use was associated with higher odds of fear of weight gain, self-worth tied to weight, compensatory behaviors to prevent weight gain, binge eating, and distress with binge eating two years later (odds ratio [OR] 1.05–1.55). Both problematic social media and mobile phone use were associated with higher odds of all eating disorder symptoms (OR 1.26–1.82).
Conclusions
Findings suggest greater total screen time, social media use, and problematic screen use are associated with more eating disorder symptoms in early adolescence. Clinicians should consider assessing for problem screen use and, when high, screen for disordered eating.
Level of evidence
Level III: Evidence obtained from well-designed cohort or case–control analytic studies.
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