Sex differences in children's exposure to food and beverage advertisements on broadcast television in four cities in Canada.

IF 2.2 4区 医学 Q2 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Health Promotion and Chronic Disease Prevention in Canada-Research Policy and Practice Pub Date : 2023-05-01 DOI:10.24095/hpcdp.43.5.02
Monique Potvin Kent, Julia Soares Guimarães, Ashley Amson, Elise Pauzé, Lauren Remedios, Mariangela Bagnato, Meghan Pritchard, Ajiri Onwo, David Wu, Mary L'Abbé, Christine Mulligan, Laura Vergeer, Madyson Weippert
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Abstract

Introduction: Sex differences exist in children's obesity rates, dietary patterns and television viewing. Television continues to be a source of unhealthy food advertising exposure to children in Canada. Our objective was to examine sex differences in food advertising exposure in children aged 2 to 17 years across four Canadian English language markets.

Methods: We licensed 24-hour television advertising data from the company Numerator for January through December 2019, in four cities (Vancouver, Calgary, Montréal and Toronto) across Canada. Child food advertising exposure overall, by food category, television station, Health Canada's proposed nutrient profiling model, and marketing techniques were examined on the 10 most popular television stations among children and compared by sex. Advertising exposure was estimated using gross rating points, and sex differences were described using relative and absolute differences.

Results: Both male and female children were exposed to an elevated level of unhealthy food advertising and a plethora of marketing techniques across all four cities. Differences between sexes were evident between and within cities. Compared to females, males in Vancouver and Montréal viewed respectively 24.7% and 24.0% more unhealthy food ads/person/year and were exposed to 90.2 and 133.4 more calls to action, 93.3 and 97.8 more health appeals, and 88.4 and 81.0 more products that appeal to children.

Conclusion: Television is a significant source of children's exposure to food advertising, with clear sex differences. Policy makers need to consider sex when developing food advertising restrictions and monitoring efforts.

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加拿大四个城市儿童接触广播电视食品和饮料广告的性别差异。
儿童肥胖率、饮食模式和看电视时间存在性别差异。电视仍然是加拿大儿童接触不健康食品广告的一个来源。我们的目的是研究加拿大四个英语语言市场中2至17岁儿童食品广告曝光的性别差异。方法:我们从Numerator公司获得2019年1月至12月在加拿大四个城市(温哥华、卡尔加里、蒙塔姆和多伦多)的24小时电视广告数据。儿童食品广告的总体曝光率,按食品类别、电视台、加拿大卫生部提出的营养概况模型和营销技术,在10个最受儿童欢迎的电视台进行了检查,并按性别进行了比较。广告曝光是用总评分点来估计的,性别差异是用相对和绝对差异来描述的。结果:在所有四个城市中,男性和女性儿童都暴露在高水平的不健康食品广告和过多的营销技巧中。城市之间和城市内部的性别差异都很明显。与女性相比,温哥华和蒙特卡莫尔的男性每人每年观看的不健康食品广告分别多24.7%和24.0%,接触到的行动呼吁分别多90.2和133.4个,健康呼吁分别多93.3和97.8个,吸引儿童的产品分别多88.4和81.0个。结论:电视是儿童接触食品广告的重要来源,性别差异明显。决策者在制定食品广告限制和监控措施时需要考虑性别因素。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
65
审稿时长
40 weeks
期刊介绍: Health Promotion and Chronic Disease Prevention in Canada: Research, Policy and Practice (the HPCDP Journal) is the monthly, online scientific journal of the Health Promotion and Chronic Disease Prevention Branch of the Public Health Agency of Canada. The journal publishes articles on disease prevention, health promotion and health equity in the areas of chronic diseases, injuries and life course health. Content includes research from fields such as public/community health, epidemiology, biostatistics, the behavioural and social sciences, and health services or economics.
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