Yancey Antronette K, Cole Brian L, Brown Rochelle, Williams Jerome D, Hillier Amy, Kline Randolph S, Ashe Marice, Grier Sonya A, Backman Desiree, McCarthy William J
UCLA School of Public Health, University of California at Los Angeles, 650 Charles Young Drive South, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA.
Milbank Q. 2009 Mar;87(1):155-84. doi: 10.1111/j.1468-0009.2009.00551.x.
Commercial marketing is a critical but understudied element of the sociocultural environment influencing Americans' food and beverage preferences and purchases. This marketing also likely influences the utilization of goods and services related to physical activity and sedentary behavior. A growing literature documents the targeting of racial/ethnic and income groups in commercial advertisements in magazines, on billboards, and on television that may contribute to sociodemographic disparities in obesity and chronic disease risk and protective behaviors. This article examines whether African Americans, Latinos, and people living in low-income neighborhoods are disproportionately exposed to advertisements for high-calorie, low nutrient-dense foods and beverages and for sedentary entertainment and transportation and are relatively underexposed to advertising for nutritious foods and beverages and goods and services promoting physical activities.
Outdoor advertising density and content were compared in zip code areas selected to offer contrasts by area income and ethnicity in four cities: Los Angeles, Austin, New York City, and Philadelphia.
Large variations were observed in the amount, type, and value of advertising in the selected zip code areas. Living in an upper-income neighborhood, regardless of its residents' predominant ethnicity, is generally protective against exposure to most types of obesity-promoting outdoor advertising (food, fast food, sugary beverages, sedentary entertainment, and transportation). The density of advertising varied by zip code area race/ethnicity, with African American zip code areas having the highest advertising densities, Latino zip code areas having slightly lower densities, and white zip code areas having the lowest densities.
The potential health and economic implications of differential exposure to obesity-related advertising are substantial. Although substantive legal questions remain about the government's ability to regulate advertising, the success of limiting tobacco advertising offers lessons for reducing the marketing contribution to the obesigenicity of urban environments.
商业营销是社会文化环境中的一个关键要素,但目前对其研究不足,它影响着美国人的食品和饮料偏好及购买行为。这种营销还可能影响与体育活动和久坐行为相关的商品和服务的使用。越来越多的文献记载,杂志、广告牌和电视上的商业广告针对不同种族/族裔和收入群体,这可能导致肥胖、慢性病风险及防护行为方面的社会人口统计学差异。本文探讨非裔美国人、拉丁裔以及低收入社区居民是否过多接触高热量、低营养密度食品和饮料以及久坐娱乐和交通方面的广告,而相对较少接触营养食品和饮料以及促进体育活动的商品和服务的广告。
在洛杉矶、奥斯汀、纽约市和费城四个城市,按地区收入和种族选择邮编区域,比较户外广告的密度和内容。
在所选邮编区域,广告的数量、类型和价值存在很大差异。生活在高收入社区,无论其居民的主要种族是什么,通常可避免接触大多数类型的促肥胖户外广告(食品、快餐、含糖饮料、久坐娱乐和交通)。广告密度因邮编区域的种族/族裔而异,非裔美国人邮编区域的广告密度最高,拉丁裔邮编区域的密度略低,白人邮编区域的密度最低。
不同程度接触与肥胖相关广告的潜在健康和经济影响重大。尽管政府监管广告的能力在法律上仍存在重大问题,但限制烟草广告的成功经验可为减少营销对城市环境致肥胖性的影响提供借鉴。