Huhman Marian E, Potter Lance D, Duke Jennifer C, Judkins David R, Heitzler Carrie D, Wong Faye L
Division of Adolescent and School Health, National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia 30341, USA.
Am J Prev Med. 2007 Jan;32(1):38-43. doi: 10.1016/j.amepre.2006.08.030.
Amid concern for the consequences of physical inactivity among children, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention started a campaign using commercial marketing methods to promote physical activity to children.
Longitudinal study using a telephone survey to assess physical activity behaviors and attitudes at baseline and for 2 years of follow-up. Relationships of campaign awareness to behavioral and psychosocial effects were analyzed with use of propensity scoring.
Nationally representative cohort of 2257 parent-child dyads.
Marketing campaign (VERB) directed to all U.S. children aged 9 to 13 years. Components included general market and ethnic-specific advertisements on television and radio, in print, and through promotions in communities, schools, and on the Internet. Advertising ran nationally at consistent levels from June 2002 through June 2004.
Psychosocial measures and self-reports of free-time and organized physical activity during nonschool hours in the week before the interview and on the day before the interview.
After 2 years, a dose-response effect was detected in the study population. The more children who reported seeing VERB messages, the more physical activity they reported and the more positive their attitudes were about the benefits of being physically active. Children aware of VERB reported engaging in significantly more physical activity than children unaware of VERB. These results were considerably stronger than the effects after Year 1, which were only for physical activity among subpopulations.
The VERB campaign continued to positively influence children's attitudes about physical activity and their physical activity behaviors and expanded the effects to more children. With adequate and sustained investment, health marketing shows promise to affect the attitudes and behavior of children.
鉴于对儿童缺乏身体活动后果的担忧,疾病控制与预防中心发起了一项运动,采用商业营销手段向儿童推广身体活动。
纵向研究,通过电话调查评估基线时以及随访2年期间的身体活动行为和态度。运用倾向评分分析运动认知与行为及心理社会效应之间的关系。
全国具有代表性的2257对亲子样本。
针对所有9至13岁美国儿童的营销活动(VERB)。其组成部分包括在电视、广播、印刷品上以及通过社区、学校和互联网推广进行的一般市场和特定种族广告。广告于2002年6月至2004年6月在全国持续投放。
心理社会指标以及访谈前一周非上课时间和访谈前一天的自由时间及有组织体育活动的自我报告。
2年后,在研究人群中发现了剂量反应效应。报告看过VERB信息的儿童越多,他们报告的身体活动就越多,且他们对身体活动益处的态度就越积极。知晓VERB的儿童报告的身体活动明显多于不知晓VERB的儿童。这些结果比第1年之后的效应强得多,第1年的效应仅针对亚人群中的身体活动。
VERB运动继续对儿童对身体活动的态度及其身体活动行为产生积极影响,并将影响扩大到更多儿童。通过充足且持续的投资,健康营销有望影响儿童的态度和行为。