Promotion of Meal Premiums in Child-Directed TV Advertising for Children’s Fast-food Meals

Author:

Emond Jennifer A.123,Utter Hannah4,Eschholz Alec3,Chang Vincent4,Gottlieb Mark A.5,Sargent James D.12

Affiliation:

1. The C. Everett Koop Institute,

2. Department of Biomedical Data Science, and

3. Media and Health Behaviors Laboratory, Geisel School of Medicine,

4. Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire; and

5. Public Health Advocacy Institute at Northeastern University School of Law, Boston, Massachusetts

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Fast-food intake is a modifiable obesity risk factor in early childhood, and child-directed fast-food marketing is common. Per self-regulatory guidelines regarding deception, premiums (ie, incentives or toy giveaways) in child-directed advertisements must be secondary to the advertised product. METHODS: Content analyses were performed of all child-directed fast-food television (TV) advertisements aired on four national US children’s TV networks, February 1, 2019, through January 31, 2020, to assess the emphasis of premiums relative to food. We quantified the percent of the audio transcript (word count) and visual airtime (seconds) that included premiums or food and the on-screen size of premiums relative to food in randomly selected frames from each advertisement. RESULTS: There were 28 unique child-directed advertisements for children’s fast-food meals in the study year; 27 advertisements were from one restaurant and accounted for nearly all (99.8%) of the total airtime for the 28 advertisements. Premiums were present in 27 of the 28 unique advertisements. On average, premiums (versus food) accounted for 53.0% (vs 16.0%) of words in the audio transcript and 59.2% (vs 54.3%) of the visual airtime per advertisement. In the random subset of frames that includes both premiums and food imagery, imagery of premiums accounted for 9.7% (95% CI: 6.4%–13.0%) of the on-screen area, whereas imagery of food accounted for 5.7% (95% CI: 4.4%–7.0%), an average ratio of 1.9:1 within each frame when excluding one large outlier. CONCLUSIONS: Child-directed fast-food TV advertisements emphasize premiums over food in violation of self-regulatory guidelines, counter to childhood obesity prevention efforts.

Publisher

American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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