Dimitri Christakis, MD, MPH (Editor-in-Chief, JAMA Pediatrics, Director of the Center for Child Health, Behavior and Development, Seattle Children’s Research Institute, George Adkins Professor of Pediatrics, Adjunct Professor of Psychiatry, and Adjunct Professor of Health Services, University of Washington School of Medicine, Chief Science Officer, Children and Screens), discusses how digital addiction can be rooted in early childhood digital immersion at #AskTheExperts webinar “Zero to Five: Eeny, Meeny, Mighty Tech” on February 9, 2022.

Read the Video Transcript

[Dr. Dimitri Christakis] And then finally, I want to talk about digital addiction. And we normally think of this as a problem affecting older children, adolescents and adults. But the truth is that I think, and I hope I can convince you, that it really begins in early childhood. And the media habits you develop with your young children are really essential to their long term development. When we think of addiction, we think of it as an interaction between nature and nurture, like most things in life. And I think the problem with media is that the nurture is ubiquitous, which is to say if your child has any predisposition to develop digital addiction, they’re very likely to be at high risk for it if not to actually develop it, because we immerse children and be in media from a very, very young age.

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Ask the Experts—Webinar

Zero to Five: Eeny, Meeny, Mighty Tech

What happens to the foundational cognitive, psychosocial, emotional and physical developmental needs during the critical first five years that may be challenged or enhanced by media?

Social Relationships
Brain and Cognition
Education & Learning
Parenting
7 Speakers