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Parents fail to limit exposure to
TV violence
Chicago -
Many parents try but fail to limit their children's exposure to
violence on television and in video games, a study released on Tuesday
showed.
In a survey at three health clinics
in the Washington, D.C., area, nearly three-quarters of parents with
young children admitted their children see "fighting, guns, and other
violence on television" at least once a week despite their efforts,
said the report published in the journal Pediatrics.
"Viewing of violence on television
has been associated in many previous studies with aggressive behavior,
and many child health professionals recommend limiting children's
exposure to it. However, that is easier said than done," said
pediatrician Tina Cheng of Johns Hopkins University.
Exposure to media violence often
occurs outside the home.
In the survey of 677 parents or
guardians, only a quarter said their youngest child did not watch
television at all.
Among parents whose children were
allowed to watch television, 45 percent said they usually watched with
them. But parental monitoring decreased as the child grew older.
Cheng said parents should avoid
putting a television in a child's bedroom and limit viewing.
In addition, health care providers
could do a better job of advising parents about evidence that shows
exposure to media violence can lead to aggressive and antisocial
behavior.
In an unrelated study in the journal,
2,500 adolescents were surveyed about their movie-going and smoking
habits.
It found an association between
parental permissiveness in allowing children to see R-rated movies
that might glamorize smoking and the odds of them trying cigarettes.
"More than four-fifths of movies,
including many specifically meant for young audiences, contain
smoking," which exerts a powerful influence on the young, said the
researchers from Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire. --
Reuters
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