The differential association between background versus foreground media exposure and child sleep outcomes
Reference
Booth MA, Cockroft R, Barr R, Kirkorian H, Kerr M, Koch FS, Sundqvist A, Coyne SM, Radesky J, Fitzpatrick C. (2026). The differential association between background versus foreground media exposure and child sleep outcomes. Academic Pediatrics. 26(4).
Abstract
Objective : Sleep problems affect nearly 25% of 2- to 5-year-old children and are associated with poor cardiometabolic health and may contribute to poor emotional well-being. Given that exposure to background media can be conceptualized as a form of chronic noise exposure, which has been linked to reduced sleep quality, in this preregistered study (OSF https://osf.io/g7jbf/?view_only=830fcc92058f4ecca0e0c83413c4f0b9) we tested a) whether background TV is associated with the quantity and quality of sleep in children aged 2- to 5-years in Canada, Sweden and the United States and b) whether child daily screen use duration or foreground media was associated with sleep quality.
Methods : From February 2019 to August 2021, 885 parents recorded child exposure to background media and child sleep outcomes (sleep duration [daytime and nighttime], sleep interruptions, sleep latency, and parental concerns with child’s sleep), as well as child age, parent socioeconomic status, and child daily screen use duration. Cluster analysis was used to produce sleep profiles to categorize children into poor and good sleepers.
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.acap.2026.103308