GetDeAddicted
What is screen time really doing to babies, toddlers, and young children? In this episode of the Phone Addiction podcast, we expose the silent cognitive damage that can happen between birth and age 8 — the most critical window for brain development in a child's entire life. While most conversations about phone addiction focus on teens, the youngest children may be the most vulnerable of all. We unpack how early screen exposure disrupts language acquisition, weakens imaginative play, shortens attention spans, and quietly undermines the foundational cognitive architecture kids need to thrive in school and life. In this episode we cover: * Why the first 8 years are the most rapid period of brain growth — and why it matters * How screens displace the "serve and return" interactions babies need for language development * The research linking early screen time to speech delays, weaker vocabulary, and reduced empathy * Why unstructured, imaginative play is essential for executive function — and how screens steal it * The American Academy of Pediatrics, WHO, and CDC guidelines for screen time by age * How "educational" apps and shows often deliver far less learning than parents are told * Practical, low-guilt strategies to protect young minds without going screen-free overnight Drawing on research from developmental psychologists, pediatricians, and leading neuroscientists, this is essential listening for parents of young children, grandparents, early childhood educators, and pediatric professionals. 🎧 Part of our Phone Addiction series — subscribe for new episodes on screens, brain development, and raising healthy kids in the digital age.
25 episoder
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