Liu Peng, Yu Yang, King Lesley, Li Mu
Institute of Iodine Deficiency Disorders, Center for Endemic Disease Control, Chinese Center for Disease Control, Key Lab of Etiology and Epidemiology, Education Bureau of Heilongjiang Province and Ministry of Health, Harbin Medical University, Harbin, China.
Sydney School of Public Health, the University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia.
Asia Pac J Clin Nutr. 2017;26(6):1125-1132. doi: 10.6133/apjcn.012017.04.
The consumption of unhealthy snack and beverages can lead to childhood obesity, which has become a major concern globally. Television food advertisements may influence children's snack and beverages preferences. This article aims to explore children's snack and beverage consumption habits; examine the extent of television advertising for non-core (energy-dense, nutrient poor) snack and beverages; and assess the influence of television advertising on children's snack and beverages preferences in Harbin, China.
The study consisted of two components, a recall survey on the snack and beverage consumption and preferences of 9-11 years old school children; and recording snack and beverage advertisements on three popular television channels. Odds Ratio (OR) was used to estimate the likelihood of children selecting particular snack and beverages as their top three choices according to whether their preferences were influenced by television advertisements.
The majority of children consumed non-core snacks (100%) and beverages (80%) in the four weeks prior to the survey. Nearly 40% of television food advertisements were for non-core snacks and beverages. Non-core snacks (OR of 1.13) and non-core beverages (OR of 1.23) were more likely chosen as children's top three snack/beverage choices, particularly, "puffed food and tubers" snack and carbonated beverages (OR of 1.31 and 1.45, respectively).
The snack and beverage preferences appeared to be influenced by television advertisements in this sample of Chinese children, highlighting the potential health and nutritional value of policy to reduce advertising of non-core foods in China.
不健康零食和饮料的消费会导致儿童肥胖,这已成为全球主要关注的问题。电视食品广告可能会影响儿童对零食和饮料的偏好。本文旨在探讨中国哈尔滨儿童的零食和饮料消费习惯;调查非核心(能量密集、营养匮乏)零食和饮料的电视广告投放程度;并评估电视广告对儿童零食和饮料偏好的影响。
该研究包括两个部分,一是对9至11岁在校儿童的零食和饮料消费及偏好进行回忆调查;二是记录三个热门电视频道上的零食和饮料广告。采用比值比(OR)来估计儿童根据其偏好是否受电视广告影响而将特定零食和饮料选为前三大选择的可能性。
在调查前四周,大多数儿童食用了非核心零食(100%)和饮料(80%)。近40%的电视食品广告是关于非核心零食和饮料的。非核心零食(OR为1.13)和非核心饮料(OR为1.23)更有可能被选为儿童的前三大零食/饮料选择,特别是“膨化食品和块茎类”零食以及碳酸饮料(OR分别为1.31和1.45)。
在这个中国儿童样本中,零食和饮料偏好似乎受到电视广告的影响,这凸显了中国减少非核心食品广告政策的潜在健康和营养价值。