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Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Formative Research

Date Submitted: Jun 22, 2022
Date Accepted: Sep 15, 2022

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

The Family Level Assessment of Screen Use–Mobile Approach: Development of an Approach to Measure Children’s Mobile Device Use

Perez O, Kumar Vadathya A, Beltran A, Barnett RM, Hindera O, Garza T, Musaad SM, Baranowski T, Hughes SO, Mendoza JA, Sabharwal A, Veeraraghavan A, O'Connor TM

The Family Level Assessment of Screen Use–Mobile Approach: Development of an Approach to Measure Children’s Mobile Device Use

JMIR Form Res 2022;6(10):e40452

DOI: 10.2196/40452

PMID: 36269651

PMCID: 9636534

The FLASH Mobile Approach: Feasibility of an app to measure children’s mobile device use

  • Oriana Perez; 
  • Anil Kumar Vadathya; 
  • Alicia Beltran; 
  • R. Matthew Barnett; 
  • Olivia Hindera; 
  • Tatyana Garza; 
  • Salma M. Musaad; 
  • Tom Baranowski; 
  • Sheryl O. Hughes; 
  • Jason A. Mendoza; 
  • Ashutosh Sabharwal; 
  • Ashok Veeraraghavan; 
  • Teresia M. O'Connor

ABSTRACT

Background:

There is a strong association between increased mobile device use and worse dietary habits, sleep outcomes, poor academic performance in children. Self-report or parent-proxy report of children's screen time has been the most common method of measuring screen time, which may be imprecise or biased.

Objective:

The objective of this study is to assess the feasibility of measuring child screen time on mobile devices by using the Family Level Assessment of Screen use (FLASH)-Mobile approach, an innovative and objective method which leverages existing features of the Android platform.

Methods:

The pilot study consisted of two lab-based observation feasibility studies and two home-based feasibility studies in the U.S. Forty-eight parent-child dyads. Parent and 6-11 year old child. Child had to have their own, or a shared Android deice. The lab-based studies included series of tasks while using the mobile device and watching TV. Video-recordings were coded by staff for a gold-standard comparison. The home-based studies instructed parent-child dyads to use their mobile device as they typically use it over three days. Parents reviewed use logs at the end of the study and completed an exit interview.

Results:

The final version of the FLASH-Mobile approach resulted in user identification compliance rates of over 90% for smartphones and over 80% for tablets. For lab-based studies, a mean agreement of 73.6% was achieved compared to the gold standard in capturing the target child’s mobile use.

Conclusions:

The FLASH-Mobile approach offers an important new research approach to measure children's use of mobile devices more accurately across several days, even when the child shares the device with other family members. With additional enhancement and validation studies, the approach can significantly advance the measurement of mobile device use among young children. Clinical Trial: Not applicable.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Perez O, Kumar Vadathya A, Beltran A, Barnett RM, Hindera O, Garza T, Musaad SM, Baranowski T, Hughes SO, Mendoza JA, Sabharwal A, Veeraraghavan A, O'Connor TM

The Family Level Assessment of Screen Use–Mobile Approach: Development of an Approach to Measure Children’s Mobile Device Use

JMIR Form Res 2022;6(10):e40452

DOI: 10.2196/40452

PMID: 36269651

PMCID: 9636534

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