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Children's television sub-standards: a call for significant amendments

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posted on 2024-11-14, 05:00 authored by Bridget Kelly GillottBridget Kelly Gillott, Josephine Chau
Australia has one of the highest levels of food advertising on television in the developed world, with most advertisements being for foods that are high in fat, sugar, and/or salt. Evidence from international reviews suggests that television food advertising has an independent effect on children's food preferences and purchasing requests. While the size of this effect is indeterminate, and the evidence base is correlational and therefore inadequate for making causal inferences, there is a highly plausible link between television food advertising and overweight and obesity. It is important to examine whether current regulations protect Australian children from excessive exposure to advertisements for unhealthy food on television.

History

Citation

Kelly, B. P. & Chau, J. 2007, 'Children's television sub-standards: a call for significant amendments', Medical Journal of Australia, vol. 186, no. 1, pp. 18-18.

Journal title

Medical Journal of Australia

Volume

186

Issue

1

Pagination

18-18

Language

English

RIS ID

34418

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