Two-thirds of babies watch screens – some for eight hours a day
oj2828
48 points
70 comments
April 29, 2026
Related Discussions
Found 5 related stories in 524.9ms across 14,015 title embeddings via pgvector HNSW
- Screen time can damage under-twos' development, landmark study suggests Brajeshwar · 86 pts · June 27, 2026 · 71% similar
- Babies should not use screens at all in the first two years, major review finds Markoff · 11 pts · July 06, 2026 · 69% similar
- Grandparents are glued to their phones [video] tartoran · 194 pts · March 15, 2026 · 47% similar
- 71% Desk Workers Say Screen-Related Visual Discomfort Is Reducing Productivity platzhirsch · 20 pts · March 08, 2026 · 45% similar
- From Australia to Europe, countries move to curb children's social media access 1vuio0pswjnm7 · 40 pts · June 19, 2026 · 43% similar
Discussion Highlights (7 comments)
Mashimo
> A report finds a third of newborns use devices for more than three hours, despite government advice that under-twos have no screen time at all Disgusting :( That said, I can't read the article, paywalled. Anyone have a working link?
bcjdjsndon
TBF content is generally better than it was 15 years ago even for babies. I don't blame em...
littlecranky67
I once in a supermarket saw a probably 2-year old sitting in a stroller, holding a smartphone watching Youtube. When the ads came up, the little fella confidently pressed the "skip ad" button. I was perplexed and stunned, how can a child that can't even walk yet have the practice to know how to skip the ads. I don't even want to know the screentime that kid has.
donatj
My wife stays home with our kids. My daughter ends up watching a fair bit of television while my wife does chores and the like. We're entirely curating what she's watching and I'm just not that concerned. If anything, she's learning things that I would not thought to teach her at her age. About 6 months ago she had an assessment through the school district for early education and at 2 years of age was able to identify about half the letters of the the alphabet. My wife and I watching this happen were genuinely surprised because neither of us had even considered trying to teach the alphabet to a 2-year old. We did not teach her this, educational content taught her this. I don't really worry. I watched TV basically my entire childhood growing up in the '80s, in the height of stranger danger where I largely was not allowed to go outside. It was a lot worse than this. I watched game shows, Hogans Heroes, Night Court. She's watching Ms. Rachel, Meekah, and Sesame Street. I think the kids will be all right as long as you're involved. We're not hand our kid a tablet and saying "Go nuts". We're watching TV in the living room as a family.
zthrowaway
I have two boys. 2 and 5. We’ve never done screens, instead we do books and focused attention from each parent and we are looked at like crazy people when we tell people that. But our kids are miles ahead of their cohorts in attention span, respectfulness, behavior, socializing, etc. It’s actually alarming. I really worry about them being outcasts just by being raised like we all were.
nfRfqX5n
we avoid it very well with our kids but sometimes I am worried it won't make a difference in the long run and we are just doing hard mode for no reason. kids are pretty adaptable. will be interesting to see in 10-15 years.
helle253
One thing I'm really glad we've been doing with our eldest (3) is Saturday morning cartoons We only let her watch occasionally during the week, but saturday morning, she gets to sit in front of the TV for a few hours and watch cartoons that she gets to pick (from an approved list) It's always SO heartwarming how excited she gets when she realizes its Saturday morning.