by Sensory Therapy Place
Screens are everywhere—phones, tablets, TVs, and now even baby gear. While technology can be helpful for adults, research is clear: excessive screen time during early childhood is associated with developmental delays in areas like communication, motor skills, and emotional regulation.
Between birth and age 7, your child’s brain is rapidly building connections based on what they experience. This time is critical for movement, language, emotional bonding, and sensory integration. When screens replace real-world, hands-on interaction, children may miss essential building blocks for learning and self-regulation.
Recent studies from across the globe reveal a concerning pattern:
| Study (Year) | Population / Age Range | Key Findings |
|---|---|---|
| Madigan et al., 2019 | 2,441 children in Canada (ages 2–5) | Higher screen time at 24 and 36 months predicted lower ASQ-3 scores at 36 and 60 months, including delays in motor and language skills. |
| Takahashi et al., 2023 | 7,097 children in Japan (followed from age 1 to 4) | Children with ≥4 hours/day of screen time at age 1 were 4.78× more likely to have communication delays by age 2. Even 2–4 hours/day increased risk. |
| 2024 Systematic Review | 24 global studies of children aged 0–7 | 17 studies linked high screen time to delays in fine and gross motor development; 5 showed no effect; 2 had mixed results. |
These findings support the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) and World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines:
➡️ Avoid screen time for children under 18 months (except for video calls)
➡️ Limit screen time to 1 hour/day of quality programming for ages 2–5
A Pediatric OT’s Perspective
As pediatric occupational therapists, we understand development as an intricate dance between the body, brain, and environment. Screen time interferes with that dance in three critical ways:
In the first years of life, the brain develops through movement and sensory input. Crawling, climbing, reaching, bouncing—these actions activate primitive reflexes and shape how the nervous system wires itself.
From the lens of Dr. Svetlana Masgutova’s MNRI® method, unintegrated reflexes like the Moro or ATNR can lead to:
When a child is sitting passively with a screen instead of moving, exploring, or engaging their senses, the neurological pathways for self-regulation, coordination, and learning may not form correctly.
Language isn’t just about vocabulary—it’s built on connection. In early childhood, babies and toddlers learn to communicate through serve-and-return interactions: making eye contact, babbling and being responded to, observing facial expressions, and hearing real-time tone and rhythm of voice. These social exchanges activate key areas in the brain responsible for language, empathy, and emotional regulation.
But what happens when children are exposed to screens—and especially smartphones—too early and too often?
By the time these kids reach 10 to 13 years old, many are struggling with social anxiety, poor emotional expression, reduced self-awareness, and difficulty forming meaningful relationships.
📣 From a neurodevelopmental perspective, the brain’s social-emotional circuits require in-person, emotionally attuned interaction to mature properly. Digital interactions—likes, emojis, and texts—are not a substitute.
These aren’t just behavioral issues—they reflect gaps in the development of core relational skills that typically form between ages 0–7 and are strengthened in the years that follow through real-world experiences.
Yes, some apps and shows claim to be educational—and some are. But no screen, no matter how interactive, replaces full-body, sensory-rich play.
Real learning happens when children:
Even "good" screen content can crowd out these critical experiences. Co-viewing—watching with your child and talking about what you see—can help reduce the negative effects, but it doesn’t replace real-world learning.
At Sensory Therapy Place, we work with many children showing signs of sensory dysregulation—big emotions, poor body awareness, difficulty with transitions. A common thread? Excessive screen use in early years.
Why? Because:
We know you want the best for your child—and it’s not always easy to manage screen time in today’s world. Here’s what we recommend:
The most powerful thing you can give your child isn't an app, video, or interactive toy—it’s you. Your voice, your touch, your attention, your rhythms. These are the inputs that build healthy brains and bodies.
"Movement is the foundation of all learning."
– Dr. Carla Hannaford
"Children’s emotional regulation is shaped by the emotional availability of their caregivers."
– Dr. Gabor Maté
At Sensory Therapy Place, our team of licensed occupational therapists supports families with:
📞 Contact us today to schedule a consultation or screening.
Let’s build healthy habits from the ground up—one movement, one moment at a time.
Your sensory & nervous system guide
Hi! I'm BrainMax — your sensory & nervous system guide. Which sensory system are we supporting today? 🧠