Sociodemographic Correlates of Parental Co-Participation in Digital Media Use and Physical Play of Preschool-Age Children
Keywords
young children
physical activity
digital media use
parental co-participation
sociodemographics
guidelines
Publication details
DOI: | 10.3390/ijerph18115903 |
Issued: | 2021 |
Language: | English |
Volume: | 18 |
Issue: | 11 |
Start Page: | 5903 |
End Page: | 5903 |
Editors: | |
Authors: | Hasanen E.; Koivukoski H.; Kortelainen L.; Vehmas H.; Sääkslahti A. |
Type: | Journal article |
Journal: | International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health |
Publisher: | MDPI AG |
Topics: | Internet usage, practices and engagement; Wellbeing |
Sample: | 2512 Finnish parents and their children aged 0-6 |
Implications For Parents About: | Parental practices / parental mediation; Parental digital literacy ; Parenting guidance / support |
Implications For Stakeholders About: | Healthcare |
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.
Outcome
"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."