National School of Public Health, Institute of Health Carlos III, Ministry of Science and Innovation, Madrid, 28029, Spain.
Department of Preventive Medicine and Public Health, Hospital Central de la Cruz Roja San José y Santa Adela, Madrid, 28003, Spain.
BMC Public Health. 2024 Mar 7;24(1):739. doi: 10.1186/s12889-023-17410-z.
The influence of food advertising on food preferences and consumption could also contribute to the socio-economic inequalities among Spanish children in terms of eating habits and childhood obesity. Although the main food advertising channel targeted at children in Spain is television, available studies estimate exposure indirectly by combining content data with audience data. The aim of this study was therefore to describe the frequency of exposure to television advertising of unhealthy foods and drinks, measured directly, among Spanish children and adolescents, and analyse its socio-economic inequalities.
Observational study of television advertising impacts in a sample of 1590 children aged 4 to 16 years drawn from a consumer panel representative of the Spanish population in this age group, over the course of a full week of broadcasting in February 2022. The sample was obtained through stratified random sampling by Autonomous Region, with quotas being set by reference to socio-demographic variables. Exposure was measured with an audiometer, and the nutrient content of the food and drink advertised was analysed using the nutrient profile of the WHO Regional Office for Europe. We used the Chi-squared test to analyse possible differences in advertising coverage by socio-economic level.
The participants saw a weekly mean of 82.4 food and drink commercials, 67.4 of which were for unhealthy products (81.8%), mostly outside the child-protection time slot. On average, low-social class participants received 94.4% more impacts from unhealthy food and drink advertising than did high-class participants (99.9 vs. 51.4 respectively). The mean advertising coverage of unhealthy foods and drinks was 71.6% higher in low-class than in high-class participants (10.9% vs. 18.7%; p = 0.01).
Spanish children and adolescents received an average of 10 impacts per day from television spots for unhealthy foods and drinks. The exposure of low-class children is double that of high-class children, a finding compatible with the high prevalence of childhood obesity in Spain and the related socio-economic inequalities. To protect Spanish minors from the harmful effects of food advertising and reduce the related social health inequalities would require the implementation of a 24:00 watershed for unhealthy food advertising on television.
食物广告对食物偏好和消费的影响也可能导致西班牙儿童在饮食习惯和儿童肥胖方面出现社会经济不平等。尽管西班牙针对儿童的主要食物广告渠道是电视,但现有研究通过将内容数据与受众数据相结合来间接估计暴露情况。因此,本研究的目的是描述西班牙儿童和青少年直接测量的不健康食品和饮料电视广告的暴露频率,并分析其社会经济不平等。
这是一项在 2022 年 2 月的一周广播期间,从代表该年龄段西班牙人口的消费者小组中抽取的 1590 名 4 至 16 岁儿童中观察电视广告影响的研究。该样本通过按自治区进行分层随机抽样获得,根据社会人口统计学变量设定配额。暴露情况通过听力计进行测量,所宣传的食品和饮料的营养成分使用世界卫生组织欧洲区域办事处的营养概况进行分析。我们使用卡方检验分析社会经济水平差异对广告覆盖范围的影响。
参与者每周平均观看 82.4 个食品和饮料广告,其中 67.4 个为不健康产品(81.8%),主要在儿童保护时段之外。平均而言,低社会阶层参与者从不健康食品和饮料广告中受到的影响比高社会阶层参与者多 94.4%(分别为 99.9%和 51.4%)。低社会阶层参与者的不健康食品和饮料广告覆盖率平均比高社会阶层参与者高 71.6%(分别为 10.9%和 18.7%;p=0.01)。
西班牙儿童和青少年每天平均受到 10 次不健康食品和饮料电视广告的影响。低社会阶层儿童的暴露量是高社会阶层儿童的两倍,这一发现与西班牙儿童肥胖症的高患病率以及相关的社会经济不平等相一致。为了保护西班牙未成年人免受食品广告的有害影响并减少相关的社会健康不平等,需要在电视上对不健康食品广告实施 24:00 的分水岭。