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Global benchmarking of children's exposure to television advertising of unhealthy foods and beverages across 22 countries

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posted on 2024-11-14, 20:16 authored by Bridget Kelly GillottBridget Kelly Gillott, Stefanie Vandevijvere, See Hoe Ng, Jean Adams, Lorena Allemandi, Liliana Bahena-Espina, Simon Barquera, Emma J Boyland, Paul Calleja, Isabel Cristina Carmona-Garces, Luciana Castronuovo, Daniel Cauchi, Teresa Correa, Camila Corvalan, Emma Cosenza-Quintana, Carlos Fernandez-Escobar, Laura Gonzalez-Zapata, Jason C Halford, Nongnuch Jaichuen, Melissa Jensen, Tilakavati Karupaiah, Asha Kaur, Maria Kroker-Lobos, Zandile Mchiza, Krista Miklavec, Whadi-ah Parker, Monique Potvin Kent, Igor Pravst, Manuel Ramirez-Zea, Sascha Reiff, Marcela Reyes, Miguel Royo-Bordonada, Putthipanya Rueangsom, Peter Scarborough, Maria Tiscornia, Lizbeth Tolentino-Mayo, Jillian Wate, Martin White, Irina Zamora-Corrales, Lingxia Zeng, Boyd A Swinburn
Restricting children's exposures to marketing of unhealthy foods and beverages is a global obesity prevention priority. Monitoring marketing exposures supports informed policymaking. This study presents a global overview of children's television advertising exposure to healthy and unhealthy products. Twenty-two countries contributed data, captured between 2008 and 2017. Advertisements were coded for the nature of foods and beverages, using the 2015 World Health Organization (WHO) Europe Nutrient Profile Model (should be permitted/not-permitted to be advertised). Peak viewing times were defined as the top five hour timeslots for children. On average, there were four times more advertisements for foods/beverages that should not be permitted than for permitted foods/beverages. The frequency of food/beverages advertisements that should not be permitted per hour was higher during peak viewing times compared with other times (P < 0.001). During peak viewing times, food and beverage advertisements that should not be permitted were higher in countries with industry self-regulatory programmes for responsible advertising compared with countries with no policies. Globally, children are exposed to a large volume of television advertisements for unhealthy foods and beverages, despite the implementation of food industry programmes. Governments should enact regulation to protect children from television advertising of unhealthy products that undermine their health.

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Citation

Kelly Gillott, B., Vandevijvere, S., Ng, S., Adams, J., Allemandi, L., Bahena-Espina, L., Barquera, S., Boyland, E., Calleja, P., Carmona-Garces, I., Castronuovo, L., Cauchi, D., Correa, T., Corvalan, C., Cosenza-Quintana, E., Fernandez-Escobar, C., Gonzalez-Zapata, L. I., Halford, J., Jaichuen, N., Jensen, M. L., Karupaiah, T., Kaur, A., Kroker-Lobos, M. F., Mchiza, Z., Miklavec, K., Parker, W., Potvin Kent, M., Pravst, I., Ramirez-Zea, M., Reiff, S., Reyes, M., Royo-Bordonada, M.,Rueangsom, P., Scarborough, P., Tiscornia, M. Victoria., Tolentino-Mayo, L., Wate, J., White, M., Zamora-Corrales, I., Zeng, L. & Swinburn, B. (2019). Global benchmarking of children's exposure to television advertising of unhealthy foods and beverages across 22 countries. Obesity Reviews, 20 (52), 1116-128.

Journal title

Obesity Reviews

Volume

20

Issue

S2

Pagination

116-128

Language

English

RIS ID

135215

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