Does your child spend hours surfing the Net?
Beware, it may increase the youngster's chances oftaking drugs and indulging in unprotected sex, a new study has claimed.
Researchers at the Queen's University in Canada found that young adults who are regularly glued to their screens arefar more likely to engage in risky behaviour than their peers.
Such teenagers, the researchers found, were 50 per centmore likely to engaged in six 'multi-risk behaviours', such as smoking, drunkenness, drug use, having unprotected sex and notusing seat belts, the Daily Mail reported.
Study author Valerie Carson said that their research was 'based on social cognitive theory, which suggested that seeing people engaged in a behaviour is a way of learning that behaviour'.
"Since adolescents are exposed to considerable screen time -- over 4.5 hours on average each day -- they are constantly seeing images of behaviours they can then potentially adopt."
One explanation behind the findings, according to the researchers, is that a considerable amount of advertising that used to