Netflix Binging In Your 20s Could Have One Major Health Consequence


Sitting on your couch marathoning the entire first season of “Narcos” might seem like a harmless enough way to spend a weekend. But according to new research, your runaway TV addiction could have some major negative health consequences down the road. 

A new long-term study shows a worrisome link between leading a sedentary, screen-heavy lifestyle in young adulthood and experiencing cognitive decline 25 years later. This is likely due, in large part, to the fact that watching television is a sedentary activity, and physical inactivity is a known contributor to cognitive decline. 

For the longitudinal study, which was published Dec. 2 in the journal JAMA Psychiatry, researchers asked 3,247 white and African-American young adults between the ages of 18 and 30 to answer questions about their television viewing and exercise habits (measured based on time and intensity of physical activity) during a series of regular check-ins over the course of the 25-year period of study. 

At the end of that timeframe, the researchers evaluated the participants’ cognitive function through tests of processing speed, executive function and verbal memory. 

Roughly 10 percent of the participants reported watching three or more hours of TV each day for at least two-thirds of the check-ins. And this group was significantly more likely to perform poorly on the tests of cognitive function. The 16 percent of participants with low physical activity ratings were also more likely to perform poorly on some of the tests.

Unsurprisingly, those at the greatest risk of cognitive deterioration were both heavy TV viewers and had low levels of physical activity. They were more than twice as likely to perform poorly on the tests. These participants exhibited slower processing speed and worse executive function, but their verbal memory remained intact, the study’s authors noted.Â