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Screen Time from Adolescence to Adulthood and Cardiometabolic Disease: a Prospective Cohort Study

Jason M. Nagata, Christopher M. Lee, Feng Lin, Kyle T. Ganson, Kelley Pettee Gabriel, Alexander Testa, Dylan B. Jackson, Erin E. Dooley, Holly C. Gooding, Eric Vittinghoff

2023Journal of General Internal Medicine38 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Previous studies have analyzed the relationship between screen time and cardiometabolic disease risk factors among adolescents, but few have examined the longitudinal effects of screen time on cardiometabolic health into adulthood using nationally representative data. OBJECTIVE: To determine prospective associations between screen time and later cardiometabolic disease over a 24-year period using a nationally representative adolescent cohort. DESIGN: Longitudinal prospective cohort data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (Add Health) collected from 1994 to 2018. PARTICIPANTS: Adolescents aged 11-18 years old at baseline (1994-1995) followed for 24 years. MAIN MEASURES: Predictors: screen time (five repeated measures of self-reported television and video watching from adolescence to adulthood). OUTCOMES: Five repeated measures of body mass index (BMI); two repeated measures of waist circumference, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, and diabetes collected at 15- and 24-year follow-up exams. KEY RESULTS: through follow-up. By 24-year follow-up, 43.4% of participants had obesity, 8.4% had diabetes, 31.8% had hypertension, and 14.9% had hyperlipidemia. In mixed-effects generalized linear models, each additional hour of screen time per day was associated with 0.06 (95% CI 0.04-0.09) within-person increase in BMI. Each additional hour of screen time per day was associated with higher within-person odds of high waist circumference (AOR 1.17, 95% CI 1.09-1.26), obesity (AOR 1.09, 95% CI 1.03-1.15), and diabetes (AOR 1.17, 95% CI 1.07-1.28). Screen time was not significantly associated with hypertension or hyperlipidemia. CONCLUSIONS: In this prospective cohort study, higher screen time in adolescence was associated with higher odds of select indicators of cardiometabolic disease in adulthood.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineScreen timeProspective cohort studyBody mass indexWaistLongitudinal studyCohortObesityCohort studyDiabetes mellitusDemographyGerontologyPediatricsInternal medicineEndocrinologySociologyPathologyObesity, Physical Activity, DietChild Development and Digital TechnologyImpact of Technology on Adolescents
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