Nursery Rhymes Have
More Violence Than Kids TV
Children's nursery rhymes contain 10
times more violence than British television shows broadcast before
the country's 9 p.m. "watershed" after which more adult content
can be shown, a recent research study published.
"You would hear about 10 times
more violence if you listened to an hour of nursery rhymes than
if you watched television for an hour before 9 o'clock on an average
day," said Dr Adam Fox of St Mary's Hospital in London.
He and his colleagues compared
violence in 25 popular nursery rhymes like "Jack and Jill" and
"Simple Simon" and in television programs on Britain's five main
television channels over a two-week period by using data from
Ofcom, the independent regulator for the British communications
industry.
There were 1,045 episodes of violence
on television over the two weeks. In an hour of viewing there
were nearly five disturbing scenes, compared to more than 52 while
listening to nursery rhymes for the same period.
Although 44 percent of nursery
rhymes contained violence, compared to half the television shows,
the researchers said the levels of accidental and aggressive violence
were twice as high in the children's tales.
Nearly 75 percent of violence on
television was implied but it dropped to 44 percent in nursery
rhymes, the researchers said in The Archives of Disease in Childhood.
Fox admitted that the approach
to the study was tongue in cheek but he said it showed that a
complex phenomena like an increase in violence in children cannot
be blamed simply on watching too much television.
In England and Wales about 10 percent
of all crimes are committed by school-age children.
"Laying the blame solely on television
is simplistic and may divert attention from vastly more complex
societal problems," Fox and his colleagues said.
Reference
Source 89
November 18, 2004
For
more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
|