Centre for Behavioural Research in Cancer, Cancer Council Victoria, 615 St Kilda Road, Melbourne, VIC 3004, Australia.
Centre for Behavioural Research in Cancer, Cancer Council Victoria, 615 St Kilda Road, Melbourne, VIC 3004, Australia.
Appetite. 2017 Oct 1;117:342-350. doi: 10.1016/j.appet.2017.07.014. Epub 2017 Jul 13.
This study aimed to test whether movie tie-in premiums (MTIPs) accompanying unhealthy and healthier fast food meals influenced children's meal preferences and their perceptions of these meals. Nine hundred and four Grade 1 and 2 students (aged 5-9 years) from Melbourne, Australia participated in a between-subjects online experiment comprising the following conditions: (A) unhealthy and healthier meals with no MTIP (control); (B) unhealthy and healthier meals with MTIP (current situation in Australia); (C) unhealthy meals with MTIP and healthier meals without MTIP; (D) unhealthy meals without MTIP and healthier meals with MTIP. The latter condition tested a potential regulatory model restricting premiums to healthier meals. Participants were shown a trailer for a current children's movie followed by an advertisement for an associated McDonald's Happy Meal (conditions B-D) or an advertisement for a children's leisure activity (condition A). They were then shown four McDonald's Happy Meal options on screen and asked to select their preferred meal before completing detailed meal ratings. Overall, children showed a preference for unhealthy meals over healthier ones. Children were significantly more likely to select a healthier meal over an unhealthy meal when only the healthier meals were accompanied by a MTIP (condition D) compared to the other three conditions. When healthier meals were accompanied by a MTIP, children reported the meal looked better, would taste better, they would be more likely to ask their parents for this meal, and they would feel happier if their parents bought them this meal, compared to when the healthier meal was not accompanied by a MTIP. Results suggest that modifying the food marketing environment to restrict MTIPs to healthier meals should encourage healthier fast food meal choices by children.
本研究旨在测试与不健康和更健康的快餐搭配的电影搭售赠品(MTIPs)是否会影响儿童对这些餐点的偏好及其认知。来自澳大利亚墨尔本的 904 名一年级和二年级学生(年龄 5-9 岁)参与了一项基于受试者的在线实验,包括以下条件:(A)没有 MTIP 的不健康和更健康的餐点(对照);(B)有 MTIP 的不健康和更健康的餐点(澳大利亚目前的情况);(C)有 MTIP 的不健康餐点和没有 MTIP 的更健康餐点;(D)没有 MTIP 的不健康餐点和有 MTIP 的更健康餐点。后一种情况测试了一种限制赠品到更健康餐点的潜在监管模型。参与者观看了一部当前儿童电影的预告片,随后是麦当劳快乐套餐(条件 B-D)或儿童休闲活动的广告(条件 A)。然后,他们在屏幕上看到了四个麦当劳快乐套餐选项,并在完成详细的套餐评价之前选择了他们喜欢的套餐。总的来说,孩子们更喜欢不健康的套餐而不是更健康的套餐。当只有更健康的套餐伴随着 MTIP 时(条件 D),与其他三种情况相比,孩子们更有可能选择更健康的套餐而不是不健康的套餐。当更健康的套餐伴随着 MTIP 时,与没有 MTIP 时相比,孩子们报告说这种套餐看起来更好,味道更好,他们更有可能向父母要这种套餐,如果他们的父母为他们买这种套餐,他们会感到更快乐。研究结果表明,修改食品营销环境,将 MTIP 限制在更健康的餐点上,应该会鼓励儿童选择更健康的快餐。