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Sex differences in children’s exposure to food and beverage advertisements on broadcast television in four cities in Canada

Authors :
Potvin Kent, Monique
Soares Guimares, Julia
Amson, Ashley
Pauz, Elise
Remedios, Lauren
Bagnato, Mariangela
Pritchard, Meghan
Onwo, Ajiri
Wu, David
L’Abb, Mary
Mulligan, Christine
Vergeer, Laura
Weippert, Madyson
Source :
Health Promot Chronic Dis Prev Can
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Health Promotion and Chronic Disease Prevention Branch (HPCDP) Public Health Agency of Canada, 2023.

Abstract

Introduction Sex differences exist in children’s obesity rates, dietary patterns and television viewing. Television continues to be a source of unhealthy food advertising exposure to children in Canada. Our objective was to examine sex differences in food advertising exposure in children aged 2 to 17 years across four Canadian Englishlanguage markets. Methods We licensed 24-hour television advertising data from the company Numerator for January through December 2019, in four cities (Vancouver, Calgary, Montréal and Toronto) across Canada. Child food advertising exposure overall, by food category, television station, Health Canada’s proposed nutrient profiling model, and marketing techniques were examined on the 10 most popular television stations among children and compared by sex. Advertising exposure was estimated using gross rating points, and sex differences were described using relative and absolute differences. Results Both male and female children were exposed to an elevated level of unhealthy food advertising and a plethora of marketing techniques across all four cities. Differences between sexes were evident between and within cities. Compared to females, males in Vancouver and Montréal viewed respectively 24.7% and 24.0% more unhealthy food ads/person/year and were exposed to 90.2 and 133.4 more calls to action, 93.3 and 97.8 more health appeals, and 88.4 and 81.0 more products that appeal to children. Conclusion Television is a significant source of children’s exposure to food advertising, with clear sex differences. Policy makers need to consider sex when developing food advertising restrictions and monitoring efforts.

Details

ISSN :
2368738X
Volume :
43
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Health Promotion and Chronic Disease Prevention in Canada
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4f85bfe65063acd895968b87beaab794