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Cutting down on kids' TV time may relieve
parents of their little ones' toy demands. New research suggests
that the fewer commercials
children see, the less materialistic they become.
For decades, there has been concern about
the number of television ads American children are exposed
to. Since the 1970s, the
average number of commercials a child sees in a year has doubled,
from about 20,000 to 40,000.
And since half of ads geared toward children
hawk toys, the situation is helping to drain parents' wallets.
It is not surprising that parents report
that television is the most common source of children's purchase
requests.
In the study, children who had had cut
their TV viewing by about one-third had their toy demands
fall. They were 70% less likely than children at the other
school to have asked their parents for a toy in the previous
week.
These results are evidence for a causal
effect of TV viewing on children's hunger for toys.
Journal of
Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics June 2001;22:179-184
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