Kelly Bridget, Smith Ben, King Lesley, Flood Victoria, Bauman Adrian
Australian Centre for Health Promotion, School of Public Health, University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
Public Health Nutr. 2007 Nov;10(11):1234-40. doi: 10.1017/S1368980007687126. Epub 2007 Mar 5.
To describe the pattern and prevalence of food and drink advertisements to children on commercial television in Sydney, Australia, and compare these with advertising regulations set out in the Children's Television Standards and results from a similar study in 2002.
Data were collected by recording television from 06.00 hours until 23.00 hours on all three commercial channels from Sunday 14 May 2006 to Saturday 20 May 2006 (357 h). The study analysed advertisements in two children's viewing periods, one as defined in the 2002 study and the other according to current standards. Food advertisements were coded using 18 food categories and were analysed by time period and popular children's programmes.
Food advertisements occurred in similar proportions during children's viewing hours and adult's viewing hours (25.5 vs. 26.9% of all advertisements, respectively), although there was a higher rate of high-fat/high-sugar food advertisements during children's viewing hours (49 vs. 39% of all food advertisements, P < 0.001). There were even more advertisements for high-fat/high-sugar foods during popular children's programmes, contributing to 65.9% of all food advertisements. Estimates of exposure indicate that children aged 5-12 years were exposed to 96 food advertisements, including 63 high-fat/high-sugar advertisements per week. Since 2002, there has been a reduction in overall food and high-fat/high-sugar food advertisements.
Despite reductions in overall levels of food advertising, children continue to experience high levels of exposure to food advertisements, which remain skewed towards unhealthy foods. Further food advertising regulation should be required to curtail the current levels of advertising of high-fat/high-sugar foods to children, to make them commensurate with recommended levels of consumption.
描述澳大利亚悉尼商业电视上针对儿童的食品和饮料广告模式及流行程度,并将其与《儿童电视标准》中的广告规定以及2002年一项类似研究的结果进行比较。
于2006年5月14日星期日至2006年5月20日星期六期间(共357小时),对所有三个商业频道从6:00至23:00的电视节目进行录制来收集数据。该研究分析了两个儿童观看时段的广告,一个是按照2002年研究定义的时段,另一个是按照现行标准定义的时段。食品广告按照18种食品类别进行编码,并按时间段和受欢迎的儿童节目进行分析。
儿童观看时段和成人观看时段的食品广告出现比例相似(分别占所有广告的25.5%和26.9%),不过在儿童观看时段高脂肪/高糖食品广告的比例更高(占所有食品广告的49%,而在成人观看时段为39%,P<0.001)。在受欢迎的儿童节目中,高脂肪/高糖食品的广告甚至更多,占所有食品广告的65.9%。曝光率估计显示,5至12岁的儿童每周会接触到96个食品广告,其中包括63个高脂肪/高糖广告。自2002年以来,食品广告和高脂肪/高糖食品广告的总体数量有所减少。
尽管食品广告的总体水平有所下降,但儿童接触食品广告的程度仍然很高,而且这些广告仍然偏向于不健康食品。应进一步加强食品广告监管,以减少目前针对儿童的高脂肪/高糖食品广告水平,使其与推荐的消费水平相符。