Experimental Evidence on the Impact of Food Advertising on Children’s Knowledge about and Preferences for Healthful Food
Author(s) -
Lucia A. Reisch,
Wencke Gwozdz,
Gianvincenzo Barba,
Stefaan De Henauw,
Natalia Lascorz,
Iris Pigeot
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
journal of obesity
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.756
H-Index - 53
eISSN - 2090-0716
pISSN - 2090-0708
DOI - 10.1155/2013/408582
Subject(s) - childhood obesity , medicine , obesity , food choice , psychological intervention , sustainability , environmental health , healthy food , scale (ratio) , test (biology) , intervention (counseling) , advertising , overweight , food science , business , ecology , paleontology , chemistry , pathology , psychiatry , biology , physics , quantum mechanics
To understand the rising prevalence of childhood obesity in affluent societies, it is necessary to take into account the growing obesity infrastructure, which over past decades has developed into an obesogenic environment. This study examines the effects of one of the constituent factors of consumer societies and a potential contributory factor to childhood obesity: commercial food communication targeted to children. Specifically, it investigates the impact of TV advertising on children's food knowledge and food preferences and correlates these findings with their weight status. Evaluations of traditional information- and education-based interventions suggest that they may not sustainably change food patterns. Based on prior consumer research, we propose five hypotheses, which we then test using a subsample from the IDEFICS study, a large-scale pan-European intervention study on childhood obesity. The results indicate that advertising has divergent effects on children's food knowledge and preferences and that food knowledge is unrelated to food preferences. This finding has important implications for both future research and public policy.
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