Extent and Nature of Television Food and Nonalcoholic Beverage Marketing in 9 Asian Countries: Cross-Sectional Study Using a Harmonized Approach.

IF 2.1 Q2 PEDIATRICS JMIR Pediatrics and Parenting Pub Date : 2024-12-04 DOI:10.2196/63410
Tilakavati Karupaiah, Shah Md Mahfuzur Rahman, Juan Zhang, Naveen Kumar, Batjargal Jamiyan, Raj Kumar Pokharel, Elaine Quintana Borazon, Tharanga Thoradeniya, Nguyen Thi Thi Tho, Sally Mackay, Bridget Kelly, Boyd Swinburn, Karuthan Chinna, Enkhmyagmar Dashzeveg, Gild Rick Ong, Sreelakshmi Sankara Narayanan, Mohd Jamil Sameeha, Mohammad Ahsan Uddin, Yuxiang Tang, Naresh Kumar Sharma, Rishav Pokharel, Anna Christine Rome, V Pujitha Wickramasinghe, Phan Thanh Huy
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Abstract

Background: Rising childhood obesity rates in Asia are adding risk for the future adult burden of obesity and noncommunicable diseases. Weak policies across most Asian countries enable unrestricted marketing of obesogenic foods and beverages to children. Television is the common medium for food marketing to reach this audience.

Objective: This study aimed to assess the extent and nature of television food and nonalcoholic beverage marketing in 9 Asian countries (Bangladesh, China, India, Malaysia, Mongolia, Nepal, the Philippines, Sri Lanka, and Vietnam) with capacity building support from the International Network for Food and Obesity/Non-Communicable Disease Research, Monitoring and Action Support, who enabled harmonization of data collection method and content analyses.

Methods: Advertised foods were categorized as permitted or not permitted based on the nutrient profile models established by the World Health Organization regional offices for South-East Asia (SEARO) and the World Health Organization regional offices for Western Pacific (WPRO). Overall rates of food advertisements (advertisements per hour per channel) and persuasive strategy use were analyzed along with comparisons between children's peak viewing time (PVT) and non-PVT.

Results: Cross-country comparisons, irrespective of country income level, indicated that not permitted food advertising dominated children's popular television channels, especially during PVT with rates as per WPRO or SEARO criteria ranging from 2.40/2.29 (Malaysia) to 9.70/9.41 advertisements per hour per channel (the Philippines). Persuasive strategy rates were also comparatively higher during PVT. Sugar-sweetened beverages, sugar-containing solid foods, and high salt- and fat-containing snacks and fast foods were frequently advertised. Evaluation of the application of WPRO and SEARO nutrient profile models identified inconsistencies due to regional taste and cuisine variations across Asia.

Conclusions: This study clearly showed that unhealthy food marketing through popular children's television channels is widely occurring in Asia and is a clear breach of child rights. Evidence outcomes will benefit advocacy toward stronger policy regulations to control unhealthy food marketing and strengthen strategies to promote a healthier food environment for Asia's children.

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9个亚洲国家电视食品和非酒精饮料营销的范围和性质:采用统一方法的横断面研究。
背景:亚洲儿童肥胖率的上升增加了未来成人肥胖和非传染性疾病负担的风险。大多数亚洲国家政策薄弱,使致肥食品和饮料不受限制地向儿童推销。电视是食品营销接触这些受众的常用媒介。目的:本研究旨在评估9个亚洲国家(孟加拉国、中国、印度、马来西亚、蒙古、尼泊尔、菲律宾、斯里兰卡和越南)电视食品和非酒精饮料营销的程度和性质,得到国际食品和肥胖/非传染性疾病研究、监测和行动支持网络的能力建设支持,该网络实现了数据收集方法和内容分析的统一。方法:根据世界卫生组织东南亚区域办事处(SEARO)和世界卫生组织西太平洋区域办事处(WPRO)建立的营养概况模型,将广告食品分类为允许和不允许。研究人员分析了食品广告的总体比率(每个频道每小时的广告量)和说服策略的使用情况,并比较了儿童的高峰观看时间(PVT)和非PVT。结果:无论国家收入水平如何,跨国比较表明,不允许的食品广告主导了儿童电视频道,特别是在PVT期间,根据WPRO或SEARO标准,每个频道每小时的广告量从2.40/2.29(马来西亚)到9.70/9.41(菲律宾)不等。在pvt期间,说服策略率也相对较高。含糖饮料、含糖固体食物、高盐高脂肪零食和快餐的广告频繁出现。对WPRO和SEARO营养剖面模型应用的评估发现,由于亚洲地区的口味和烹饪差异,存在不一致性。结论:这项研究清楚地表明,通过流行的儿童电视频道进行不健康食品的营销在亚洲广泛发生,这显然是对儿童权利的侵犯。证据结果将有利于倡导更强有力的政策法规,以控制不健康食品的营销,并加强战略,促进为亚洲儿童提供更健康的食品环境。
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来源期刊
JMIR Pediatrics and Parenting
JMIR Pediatrics and Parenting Medicine-Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
CiteScore
5.00
自引率
5.40%
发文量
62
审稿时长
12 weeks
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