National Institute for Health Research Applied Research Collaboration West (NIHR ARC West), University Hospitals Bristol and Weston NHS Foundation Trust, Bristol, UK.
Population health Sciences, Bristol Medical School, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK.
BMC Public Health. 2023 Apr 11;23(1):668. doi: 10.1186/s12889-023-15567-1.
Exposure to advertising of unhealthy commodities such as fast-food and gambling is recognised as a risk factor for developing non-communicable diseases. Assessment of the impact of such advertisement and the evaluation of the impact of any policies to restrict such advertisements on public health are reliant on the quality of the exposure assessment. A straightforward method for assessing exposure is to ask people whether they noticed any such advertisements in their neighbourhoods. However, the validity of this method is unclear. We assessed the associations between measured exposure to outdoor advertising, self-reported exposure, and self-reported consumption.
We collected exposure information in January-March 2022 using two methods: (i) through a resident survey investigating advertising and consumption of unhealthy products, distributed across Bristol and neighbouring South Gloucestershire, and (ii) through in-person auditing. Self-reported exposure was obtained from the resident survey (N = 2,560) and measured exposure from photos obtained for all Council owned advertisement sites (N = 973 bus stops). Both data sources were geographically linked at lower-super-output-area level. Reporting ratios (RRs), 95% confidence intervals (CIs), and Cohen's kappas, are presented.
24% of advertisements displayed food and/or drink advertising. Bristol respondents in neighbourhoods displaying food/drink adverts were more likely to also report seeing these adverts compared to those in neighbourhoods without food/drink adverts (59% vs. 51%, RR = 1.15, 95%CI 1.01-1.31). There was no such association in South Gloucestershire (26% vs. 32%, RR = 0.82, 95%CI 0.58-1.14). Respondents in both Bristol and South Gloucestershire who recalled seeing advertising for unhealthy food and drink products were more likely to consume them (e.g. for fast-food: 22% vs. 11%, RR = 2.01, 95%CI 1.68-2.42). There was no such association between measured food and drink adverts in respondents' local areas and self-reported consumption of HFSS product (90.1% vs. 90.7%, RR = 0.99, 95%CI 0.96-1.03).
Self-reported outdoor advertisement exposure is correlated with measured exposure, making this a useful methodology for population studies. It has the added advantage that it correlates with consumption. However, given that measurement error can be significant and self-reported exposure is known to be susceptible to various biases, inferences from studies using this exposure metric should be made with caution.
接触快餐和赌博等不健康商品的广告被认为是引发非传染性疾病的一个风险因素。评估此类广告的影响,以及评估任何限制此类广告的政策对公众健康的影响,都依赖于暴露评估的质量。评估暴露的一种直接方法是询问人们他们是否注意到他们所在社区有任何此类广告。然而,这种方法的有效性尚不清楚。我们评估了户外广告的测量暴露、自我报告的暴露和自我报告的消费之间的关联。
我们在 2022 年 1 月至 3 月期间使用两种方法收集了暴露信息:(i)通过一项针对布里斯托尔和邻近南格洛斯特郡的居民的调查,调查不健康产品的广告和消费,(ii)通过现场审计。自我报告的暴露来自居民调查(N=2560),测量暴露来自所有议会拥有的广告地点的照片(N=973 个公共汽车站)。这两个数据源都在较低的超区层面进行了地理链接。报告比(RR)、95%置信区间(CI)和科恩氏kappa 呈现。
24%的广告展示了食品和/或饮料广告。与没有食品/饮料广告的社区相比,在显示食品/饮料广告的社区中,布里斯托尔的受访者更有可能报告看到这些广告(59%比 51%,RR=1.15,95%CI 1.01-1.31)。在南格洛斯特郡没有这种关联(26%比 32%,RR=0.82,95%CI 0.58-1.14)。布里斯托尔和南格洛斯特郡的受访者中,那些回忆起看到不健康食品和饮料广告的人更有可能消费这些产品(例如,对于快餐:22%比 11%,RR=2.01,95%CI 1.68-2.42)。受访者所在地区的食物和饮料广告与自我报告的 HFSS 产品消费之间没有这种关联(90.1%比 90.7%,RR=0.99,95%CI 0.96-1.03)。
自我报告的户外广告暴露与测量暴露相关,这使其成为人群研究的有用方法。它还有一个额外的好处,即它与消费相关。然而,由于测量误差可能很大,而且自我报告的暴露容易受到各种偏差的影响,因此,使用这种暴露指标的研究的推论应该谨慎。