Comments in the pamphlet particularly focused on the role of technology. Loughton warned that relationships between parents and children are ‘in danger of becoming increasingly sidelined by advances in tech­nology’. He also said that by the time chil­dren born today are seven years old they will have spent a year of their lives look­ing at a screen, and by the time they are a teenager they are more likely to have a TV in their room than they are to have both of their parents living at home.  

Loughton, the MP for East Worthing and Shoreham said: ‘By all accounts, grow­ing up in Britain today is more challenging than almost ever before. Pressures to get into the chosen school, to perform well at the right school, to “look cool”, to be resil­ient in the light of peer pressure, and to safeguard one’s integrity both on and off social media - the many faceted phenom­ena of the commercialisation and sexuali­sation of childhood - are all everyday chal­lenges that our children and young people have to deal with from an early age. It’s little wonder that mental health problems are affecting so many of our young people even younger. It’s also little wonder that research from the University of Greenwich claims that many young people are suf­fering from a “quarter-life crisis” in their twenties as they seek more meaning from their existence.’  

Focusing on technology, Loughton added: ‘Who needs the stimulation of human touch and the building blocks of attachment when you can have it all delivered remotely down a fibre-optic cable or, even more conveniently, have a Wi-Fi baby? It’s no wonder that we all too often struggle to shield children from the slings and arrows of social media, when many parents are accomplices in secur­ing their children a place on Facebook well before the advisory age of 13. Incred­ibly, nearly one in five children now gets their first mobile phone by the time they are five.