Hawkes Corinna
International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington, DC 20006, USA.
Am J Public Health. 2007 Nov;97(11):1962-73. doi: 10.2105/AJPH.2006.101162. Epub 2007 Sep 27.
The pressure to regulate the marketing of high-energy, nutrient-poor foods to young people has been mounting in light of concern about rising worldwide levels of overweight and obesity. In 2004, the World Health Organization called on governments, industry, and civil society to act to reduce unhealthy marketing messages. Since then, important changes have taken place in the global regulatory environment regarding the marketing of food to young people. Industry has developed self-regulatory approaches, civil society has campaigned for statutory restrictions, and governments have dealt with a range of regulatory proposals. Still, there have been few new regulations that restrict food marketing to young people. Despite calls for evidence-based policy, new regulatory developments appear to have been driven less by evidence than by ethics.
鉴于对全球超重和肥胖率不断上升的担忧,针对向年轻人推销高能量、低营养食品进行监管的压力日益增大。2004年,世界卫生组织呼吁各国政府、食品行业和民间社会采取行动,减少不健康的营销信息。自那时以来,在向年轻人推销食品方面,全球监管环境发生了重大变化。食品行业已制定了自我监管措施,民间社会开展了争取法定限制的运动,各国政府也应对了一系列监管提案。然而,几乎没有新的法规来限制向年轻人推销食品。尽管呼吁制定基于证据的政策,但新的监管进展似乎更多是由道德而非证据推动的。