Advertisements focused on unhealthy foods for children may be banned during television shows directed at them under new regulations
Research published ahead of print in the Archives of Disease in Childhood says that advertisements focused on unhealthy foods for children may be banned during television shows directed at them under new regulations.
A common belief that TV advertisers were targeting children in particular with unhealthy foods before new Ofcom regulations were introduced in 2007 to prevent this, was not the case, researchers found, questioning what real impact the regulations will actually have.Growing rates of obesity and overweight children in developed countries is a current concern and it is commonly believed that TV adverts for less healthy foods contribute to this problem.
New regulations came into effect in the UK in 2007 to prohibit adverts for less healthy foods during or around programmes "of particular appeal to" (OPAT) children. In Canada, self-regulated codes of practice on TV food advertising to children were recently strengthened.
Researchers from the UK, Canada and the USA studied the nutritional content of food adverts and adverts likely to be seen by children (i.e. shown during children's programmes) in the UK and Canada before regulations were introduced.
All food adverts broadcast on four popular channels in Canada and three terrestrial commercial channels in the UK during a week-long period in 2006 were analysed for the study.
The researchers linked these adverts to relevant nutritional data. They also identified which food adverts were for "less healthy" products, using the criteria in the UK regulations.
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Just 5% of the food adverts seen would have been prohibited under the UK regulations, the researchers found.
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They said: "This is the first published study exploring TV food advertising to children in the context of the Ofcom regulations implemented in the UK in April 2007. Few food advertisements are likely to be prohibited under the new UK regulations."
Source-Eurekalert
RAS