Gillings School of Global Public Health, Department of Nutrition, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
Carolina Population Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
BMC Public Health. 2021 Mar 6;21(1):454. doi: 10.1186/s12889-021-10460-1.
South Africa was the first sub-Saharan African country to implement a sugar-sweetened beverage (SSB) tax called the Health Promotion Levy (HPL) in April 2018. Given news media can increase public awareness and sway opinions, this study analyzed how the media represented the HPL, including expressions of support or challenge, topics associated with the levy, and stakeholder views of the HPL.
We performed a quantitative content analysis of online South African news articles related to the HPL published between January 1, 2017 and June 30, 2019. We coded the presence or absence of mentions related to health and economic effects of the HPL and HPL support or opposition. Prevalence of these mentions, overall and by source (industry, government, academics, other), were analyzed with Pearson χ and post-hoc Fisher exact tests.
Across all articles, 81% mentioned health, and 65% mentioned economics topics. 54% of articles expressed support, 26% opposition, and 20% a balanced view of the HPL. All sources except industry expressed majority support for the HPL. Health reasons were the most common justifications for support, and economic harms were the most common justifications for opposition. Statements that sugar intake is not related to obesity, the HPL will not reduce SSB intake, and the HPL will cause industry or economic harm were all disproportionately high in industry sources (92, 80, and 81% vs 25% prevalence in total sample) (p < 0.001). Statements that sugar intake is related to obesity and non-communicable diseases were disproportionately high in both government (46 and 54% vs 31% prevalence in total sample) (p < 0.001) and academics (33 and 38% vs 25% prevalence in total sample) (p < 0.05). Statements that the HPL will improve health and the HPL will reduce health care costs were disproportionately high in government (47% vs 31% prevalence in total sample) (p < 0.001) and academics (44% vs 25% prevalence in total sample) (p < 0.05), respectively.
Industry expressed no support for the HPL, whereas academics, government, and other sources mainly expressed support. Future studies would be improved by linking news media exposure to SSB intake data to better understand the effects news media may have on individual behavior change.
南非是撒哈拉以南非洲首个实施含糖饮料(SSB)税的国家,称为“健康促进税”(HPL),于 2018 年 4 月生效。鉴于新闻媒体可以提高公众意识并影响舆论,本研究分析了媒体如何报道 HPL,包括对 HPL 的支持或挑战的表达、与征税相关的主题以及利益相关者对 HPL 的看法。
我们对 2017 年 1 月 1 日至 2019 年 6 月 30 日期间在南非在线发布的与 HPL 相关的新闻文章进行了定量内容分析。我们对 HPL 的健康和经济影响以及 HPL 支持或反对的相关内容进行了有无提及的编码。通过 Pearson χ 和事后 Fisher 精确检验,分析了这些内容整体和按来源(行业、政府、学术界、其他)出现的频率。
在所有文章中,81%提到了健康问题,65%提到了经济主题。54%的文章表达了对 HPL 的支持,26%表示反对,20%则持中立态度。除了行业来源,所有来源都表示支持 HPL。健康原因是支持 HPL 的最常见理由,而经济危害则是反对 HPL 的最常见理由。关于糖摄入量与肥胖无关、HPL 不会减少 SSB 摄入量以及 HPL 会造成行业或经济危害的说法在行业来源中都非常普遍(92%、80%和 81%,而在总样本中则为 25%)(p<0.001)。糖摄入量与肥胖和非传染性疾病有关的说法在政府(46%和 54%,而在总样本中则为 31%)(p<0.001)和学术界(33%和 38%,而在总样本中则为 25%)(p<0.05)来源中也非常普遍。HPL 将改善健康和 HPL 将降低医疗保健成本的说法在政府(47%,而在总样本中则为 31%)(p<0.001)和学术界(44%,而在总样本中则为 25%)(p<0.05)来源中非常普遍。
行业对 HPL 表示不支持,而学术界、政府和其他来源则主要表示支持。未来的研究如果能将新闻媒体的接触与 SSB 摄入量数据联系起来,以更好地了解新闻媒体对个人行为改变可能产生的影响,将得到改善。