Parents who frequently pick up phones due to device notifications may be more stressed

Parents in small study received an average of almost 300 mobile notifications per day

5:00 AM

Author | Beata Mostafavi

woman walking around with laundry and kid pulling on her skirt and phone ringing with black smoke on both edges of room and house mess with green background
Justine Ross, Michigan Medicine

Busy parents may find many conveniences in phones and other mobile devices, but the daily digital notifications from these screens may also stress them out. 

Parents received an average of almost 300 mobile notifications per day between 2020-2021, a small Michigan Medicine study suggests.  

And when those buzzing pings – whether from work emails, messages or other apps – prompted parents to pick up their phones, they experienced greater daily parental stress. 

“We know that parents of young kids are often multi-tasking. The disruptions from screens has added an additional layer to that challenge of trying to respond to multiple demands at the same time,” said lead author Tiffany Munzer, M.D., developmental behavioral pediatrician at University of Michigan Health C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital 

“Parents are often juggling parenting and home life with work and other responsibilities simultaneously. It makes sense that feeling pulled away by phones may bring additional stress.”  

The study involved 62 parents of 62 children ages four to six and took place during the first two years of the COVID-19 pandemic. 

Parents’ average age was 37 years old. 

Mobile notifications were only associated with greater stress if they required parents to pick up their devices more frequently, Munzer says.  

On average, parents picked up their phones 93 times. 

Parents are often juggling parenting and home life with work and other responsibilities simultaneously. It makes sense that feeling pulled away by phones may bring additional stress.” Tiffany Munzer, M.D. 

Munzer and colleagues found parents had a higher number of total notifications and phone pick-ups compared to previous studies. 

This could have been due to greater media use during the pandemic, Munzer notes, and the need to potentially monitor devices for pandemic-related news. 

Associated stress also appeared to be higher on weekdays, suggesting that the content of notifications may have also driven parent stress, says senior author Jenny Radesky, M.D., behavioral developmental pediatrician at Mott. 

“This may have been especially true in the context of multi-tasking between work and at-home or online school demands during the COVID-19 pandemic,” she said. 

“Still, these findings give us a glimpse into how distractions from phone demands may affect day to day parental stress.”

Additional authors: Alison Miller, Heidi Weeks and Niko Kaciroti, all of U-M. 

Study cited: “Greater mobile device-prompted phone pickups are associated with daily parent stress,” Acta Paediatrica.

Funding: This work was funded by National Institutes of Health grants K23HD092626 and K23HD105988.

Disclosures: Radesky is a paid consultant for Melissa and Doug Toys and receives research grant funding from Common Sense Media. Munzer is a paid consultant for PBS Kids 

Sign up for Health Lab newsletters today. Get medical tips from top experts and learn about new scientific discoveries every week by subscribing to Health Lab’s two newsletters, Health & Wellness and Research & Innovation.

Sign up for the Health Lab Podcast: Add us on Spotify, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get you listen to your favorite shows. 


More Articles About: C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital Children's Health
Health Lab word mark overlaying blue cells
Health Lab

Explore a variety of health care news & stories by visiting the Health Lab home page for more articles.

Media Contact Public Relations

Department of Communication at Michigan Medicine

[email protected]

734-764-2220

Stay Informed

Want top health & research news weekly? Sign up for Health Lab’s newsletters today!

Subscribe
Featured News & Stories syringes three in a row with one with a shot going into it on a light teal background
Health Lab
TNF inhibitors prevent complications in kids with Crohn’s disease, recommended as first-line therapies
Early treatment of pediatric Crohn’s disease with anti-tumor necrosis factor medications can substantially reduce the risk of perianal fistulas in Crohn’s disease. Michigan Medicine researchers confirmed this finding using prospective data. 
kid in corner sad with shadow of two parents holding hands on hips looking mad and room and everything is yellow and a shadow of close up of parent yelling at a child in corner
Health Lab
Naughty or nice? Many parents rely on threats to manage misbehavior
When young children’s behavior becomes challenging, many parents resort to threats – from taking away toys to threatening that Santa will skip their house, a national poll suggests.
patient family and child life team member smiling and then a photo next to that one with the same worker helping someone in a wheelchair in a patient office
Health Lab
A pediatric program helping adults through cardiovascular disease, surgery
A child life program that has helped kids and their families reduce stress and anxiety associated with hospitalization and illness is now finding success with adult patients undergoing complex heart procedures as well.
young adult male hugging blonde haired dog
Health Lab
Cutting edge brain neurostimulator device significantly reduces 21-year-old’s seizures
A 21-year-old patient benefits from a novel application of responsive neurostimulation, also known asRNS, surgery to reduce seizures from drug-resistant epilepsy.
A Michigan Medicine employee reads to a baby in the Brandon Neonatal Intensive Care Unit.
News Release
$10M Mott Foundation grant will help expand complex care spaces at C.S. Mott Children's Hospital
A $10 million grant from the Charles Stewart Mott Foundation to U-M will enable C.S. Mott Children's Hospital to renovate space within its NICU and PCTU.
kid screaming with fire coming out of mouth with smoke all around in grey and teddy bear panicked and parents legs on floor as if passed out or blown away
Health Lab
Does your child manage anger well?
One in seven parents think their child gets angrier than peers of the same age and four in 10 say their child has experienced negative consequences when angry, a national poll suggests.