People who spend more time looking at a screen in bed are more likely to report insomnia and sleep loss, a study has found.
Teenagers who spend more time on screens tend to get worse sleep, both in terms of sleep quality and duration, researchers reported Wednesday in the journal PLOS Global Public Health.
Whether you’re traveling, working from home, or need a quieter moment, Pok Pok offers screen time you and your kid will love.
A new Norwegian study finds that one hour of screen time at bedtime results in a 59% higher risk of insomnia and 24 fewer ...
Excessive screen time among adolescents negatively impacts multiple aspects of sleep, which in turn increases the risk of ...
A new study of over 45,000 young adults found that using screens in bed increases the risk of insomnia by 59% and cuts sleep ...
Doomscrolling before bed? A new study shows that an hour of nightly screen time raises your insomnia risk by 59 percent.
A recent study conducted in Norway revealed that individuals who spend time in front of a screen before going to bed are at a ...
Writers Noel King and Miles Bryan theorized that the widespread accessibility of technology in today's age is largely ...
“Clinically, we see that excessive screen time leads to tight chest muscles and weakened upper back muscles, increasing the ...
UCLA’s annual Hollywood Diversity Report for 2024 found that while ethnic diversity among film leads shrank from 29 to 24 percent from 2023, women in leading roles rose from 32 to nearly 48 percent in ...
My kids and our neighbors' kids play outside without adults in the afternoon. It reminds me of the childhood I had with ...