Parents urged to reward children with smartphone use amid mental health concerns

Children can be negatively impacted by using smartphones but the key to preventing harm is balance, an expert says after Apple was urged to study the iPhone's impact on children's mental health.

In this Dec. 17, 2017, photo, a baby girl plays with a mobile phone while riding in a New York subway.

In this Dec. 17, 2017, photo, a baby girl plays with a mobile phone while riding in a New York subway. Source: AAP

Children who regularly use smartphones cannot sustain attention for long periods and may struggle to focus on complex tasks, according to Information Technology Associate Professor Yeslam Al-Saggaf who's conducting a study into personality and smartphone use at Charles Sturt University.

"From the perspective of the children, we found that it could lead to an inability to sustain attention for longer periods. Children and even youth will struggle with maintaining attention," Professor Al-Saggaf told SBS News.

"For me that could create even bigger problems in terms of not being able to focus on complex ideas or difficult tasks." 

Additionally, Professor Al-Saggaf said regular use of smartphones could produce anxiety and anger in children, such as when their phones are confiscated.



He also said it was problematic when parents paid more attention to their phones than their children, an action known as 'phubbing'.

Preliminary results in a part of his study show that 32 per cent of respondents said they phubbed their children sometimes and 12 per cent said they did so very often.

"For me that’s very alarming," he said.

"Children always seek attention and if the adult, the parents, the carers, phub them, they will feel less valued, they will feel unloved and they might feel uncared for."

His comments come after Bloomberg News reported Wednesday that two large shareholders of Apple had written to the multinational technology company, urging it to study whether iPhones impacted on children's mental health.

Investor Jana Partners LLC and CALSTRS (California State Teachers' Retirement System), who own a total of about $2 billion in Apple shares, urged Apple to facilitate ways for parents to restrict children from the same access as adults have.

"There is also a growing societal unease about whether at least some people are getting too much of a good thing when it comes to technology," according to the investors' letter, dated January 6.

"At some point," they said, it "is likely to impact even Apple."   

In a statement to SBS News, a spokesperson for Apple said it had always looked out for children.

"We work hard to create powerful products that inspire, entertain, and educate children while also helping parents protect them online. We lead the industry by offering intuitive parental controls built right into the operating system."

The spokesperson said Apple began delivering controls for iPhone in 2008, which gave parents the ability to restrict content including apps, movies, websites, songs and books, as well as cellular data, password settings and other features. 

"Effectively anything a child could download or access online can be easily blocked or restricted by a parent.

The spokesperson added that Apple is committed to improving its controls.

"We have new features and enhancements planned for the future, to add functionality and make these tools even more robust." 


Reward system

Professor Al-Saggaf suggests parents regulate the amount of time children use smartphones.

"Adults' access to the smartphone is becoming more of a basic right, but for children I think of it as a privilege. They should have access to it as a reward."

He suggests children could be given access after they've played in the backyard, or played with other children "so they live as children".

But he acknowledges it is important that children not be fully restricted.

"The technology, the language of the day, they need to be able to be good at it, they need to be able to work with it and improve it and learn through it.

"And if we deny them access to the new technology we are creating another divide that will make them at a disadvantage when they go to school, [and when] they learn and they socialise and they interact with their peers who are more smartphone savvy."


Share
4 min read

Published

Updated

By Andrea Booth

Share this with family and friends


Get SBS News daily and direct to your Inbox

Sign up now for the latest news from Australia and around the world direct to your inbox.

By subscribing, you agree to SBS’s terms of service and privacy policy including receiving email updates from SBS.

Download our apps
SBS News
SBS Audio
SBS On Demand

Listen to our podcasts
An overview of the day's top stories from SBS News
Interviews and feature reports from SBS News
Your daily ten minute finance and business news wrap with SBS Finance Editor Ricardo Gonçalves.
A daily five minute news wrap for English learners and people with disability
Get the latest with our News podcasts on your favourite podcast apps.

Watch on SBS
SBS World News

SBS World News

Take a global view with Australia's most comprehensive world news service
Watch the latest news videos from Australia and across the world
Parents urged to reward children with smartphone use amid mental health concerns | SBS News