New Study Finds Preschoolers Losing Sleep To TV

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Preschool-aged children who watch more than an hour’s worth of television a day get notably less sleep than those who don’t watch, suggests research from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst.

The study, which was published in Sleep Health, the journal of the National Sleep Foundation, monitored the sleep quality and sleep quantity of 470 preschoolers aged two to five in Western Massachusetts.

The study authors also found that over 35% of the young participants had televisions in their bedrooms and nearly one-third of that group fell asleep watching television at night.

“I am not surprised that TV is bad for sleep,” lead researcher and neuroscientist Rebecca Spencer told Mattress Clarity. She also pointed to previous studies that studied this in both adults and children.

preschooler sleep study
Prostock-studio/Shutterstock

Preschoolers, TV, And Sleep

The preschool-aged children wore actigraphs, also known as wearable sleep tracking devices. Their parents or caregivers were asked to complete questionnaires about the children’s demographics, health, and television usage.

The published study highlighted three “key” findings:

  • Television use. Participants who watched less than an hour of television a day slept roughly 22 minutes longer than those who watched more than one hour.
  • Television in the bedroom. Children who had televisions in their bedroom slept, on average, 30 minutes less per day than students who had no television in their bedrooms.
  • Naps. Students with televisions in their bedrooms slept longer during naps but had a shorter length of total sleep during the day.

Spencer told us that some findings stood out for her. She said she was surprised that more than 30% of participants had televisions in their rooms. She also pointed out that more than half of the participants were watching more than the recommended amount of television for their age. This percentage climbed to more than 80% on weekends.

Dr. Noorjahan Ali, a pediatrician at Advanced Pediatric Care who is unaffiliated with the study, told us the report seemed valid. She said that previous studies have indicated events like watching television are stimulating to the brain before bedtime, even in adults.

Related: A Parents’ Guide To Helping Children Sleep

“It would have been helpful to have the duration of time of watching TV and the proximity to bedtime recorded,” she told us when we connected via email.

Ali said she recommends no more than 20-minute intervals of screen time, for a total of one hour of interactive screen time per day. She also says to stop screen time no less than 60 minutes prior to bedtime, including television, games, and video chatting.

While this study focused specifically on television use, in the future Spencer and her team plan to look at how sleep in this particular age group is affected by handheld screens and other modern media devices.

“We think the landscape is different with handheld devices — parents can take them away (you can’t remove the TV) and although parents might not be great at that, our observation is they do,” Spencer told us. “They may still have ill effects (light, stimulation) but hopefully not as close to bed, and we find the content to be more kid-oriented. We need more data, however.”

[Editor’s Note: The content provided on this site is for general informational purposes only. Any information provided is not a substitute for professional medical advice. We encourage individuals to consult with the appropriate health expert if they have concerns.]

Featured image: Morrowind/Shutterstock

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Katie Golde

Katie Golde

Senior Digital Content Manager/Managing Editor​

About Author

Katie Golde is a Certified Sleep Science Coach and previously served Managing Editor and Head of Sleep Research for Mattress Clarity. She handled the daily operations of the site and you’ll still see her in plenty of reviews, from mattresses to travel pillow and bed pillow reviews – plus the occasional How-To video. In addition, Katie reported, writed, and edited sleep health and sleep industry news for the site.

Since joining the Mattress Clarity team in 2016, she has reviewed hundreds of sleep products, like bed pillows and mattresses and written over 200 sleep-related stories for the site. She probably knows more about bamboo sheets and bed pillows than any one person should.

Katie has been writing about wellness-related topics, including sleep, for the last eight years. The first sleep story she wrote covered the best and worst foods to eat before bed. Her previous work can be found in print and online publications like Discover Magazine, USA Today, Bustle and The Huffington Post.

She has a bachelor’s degree in Sociology from Northwestern University and a master’s degree in Journalism with a focus on Interactive Publishing from Northwestern’s Medill School of Journalism as well. During her graduate studies, Katie focused on health and science reporting and she received the G.D. Crain Award for demonstrating leadership, management, and entrepreneurial excellence during her final innovation project.

Education & Credentials