Medicine, fitness, and wellbeing
1 debate
As a pediatrician who has watched countless families struggle with early childhood development issues, I believe we need legal requirements limiting screen time for children under 2 in daycare settings. The American Academy of Pediatrics is clear: children under 18 months should avoid screens entirely, except for video chatting. Yet I see toddlers in daycare facilities regularly exposed to educational tablets and TV programs that parents assume are helping their children learn. The developing brain is incredibly vulnerable during these first two years. When we allow unrestricted screen exposure in institutional settings, we're potentially compromising language development, social skills, and attention span for our most vulnerable children. Many working parents don't realize what's happening during their child's 8-hour daycare day. Just as we have regulations about food safety and nap schedules in childcare, we need enforceable guidelines about screen time. This isn't about restricting parental choice at home - it's about ensuring professional caregivers follow evidence-based practices that protect our children's neurological development during the most critical window of brain growth.