In 1982 then Surgeon General Dr. Everett Koop would sound a warning about the risks of video-games to youth and resulting "aberrations in childhood behavior." He would note the risks weren’t proven, but ensured scientific proof would inevitably emerge:
“Koop said he had no scientific evidence on the effect of video games on children, but he predicted statistical evidence will be forthcoming soon.” - Associated Press report, 1982
PAC-MAN PANIC
The Surgeon General’s comments came amidst a boom in arcade machines and the first of many panics about video-games. Children would swarm the machines, feeding them coins obtained from parents: sometimes covertly. Where comic books and television were blamed for corrupting the youth in prior decades, video-games were the new boogeyman. The Surgeon General’s comments only added fuel to the fire:
Age limit laws would be proposed, one police department blamed burglaries on the rapacious demand for quarters and one Massachusetts town even outlawed the commercialization of arcade machines. Dr. Everett Koop’s implication that his opinions would soon be proven scientific fact were quickly denounced by psychologists and the burgeoning video game industry.
One industry rep. wrote to the Surgeon General saying: “Respectfully, we must remind you that your only official mandate and authority is to develop scientific evidence.” Another said emphasis should be on proven harms to kids - like cigarettes - not speculative harms. Dr. Everett Koop would in turn issue a statement that made clear these were opinions only:
“My off-the-cuff comment was not part of any prepared remarks. Nothing in my remarks should be interpreted as implying that videos are per se violent in natures, or harmful to children”
It turned out the scientific evidence didn’t emerge. In retrospect it seems clear Dr. Everett Koop - as a medical authority - had the opportunity to quell unsubstantiated panic that distracted from more empirical threats to kids - like smoking. A few years later Dr. Koop would wade into the TV violence debate, citing the 1972 Surgeon General's Scientific Advisory Committee coming to a unanimous conclusion that violence and TV increased aggression.
That correlation is now long debunked.