Friday 7 February 2014
Study prompts call for ban on manipulative junk food advertising to children
A ban on manipulative junk food advertising to children is urgently needed to help fight increasing rates of childhood
obesity, say University of Otago Wellington researchers.
Free toys, gifts, discounts and competitions, promotional characters and celebrities, and appeals to taste and fun, are
just some of the techniques used by marketers to promote junk food to kids, according to a recent systematic literature
review.
Lead researcher Dr Gabrielle Jenkin says most children and parents will be familiar with the offer of free toys at
McDonalds, slogans such as “open happiness” with Coke, and the use of licensed characters such as Spiderman or Spongebob
Squarepants to promote junk food to children.
Persuasive food marketing is manipulative, especially for children, Dr Jenkin says.
“Such marketing has been proven to increase children’s requests for the advertised foods, their food preferences and
ultimately their diets. For example, free toys, discounts and competitions promote brand loyalty and repeat purchases,”
she says.
She and her University of Otago Wellington colleagues are calling for an outright ban on junk food advertising to
children under 16, as has been done in Norway.
In the absence of a ban, new rules would need to be added to the advertising codes around the use of persuasive
techniques, as has been done in the UK, Australian and Ireland, they say.
Dr Jenkin says the ubiquitous marketing of energy-dense, nutrient-poor food and beverages has come under increasing
public health scrutiny by international health organisations who have called on governments to monitor and address the
problem.
The World Health Organization recommends the reduction of “both the exposure of children to, and the power of, marketing
of foods”, she says. In a synthesis of peer reviewed scientific research on persuasive marketing techniques used to
promote food to children on television, the researchers found premium offers, the use of promotional characters,
nutritional and health claims, and the themes of “taste” and “ fun” were commonly uses to promote unhealthy food to
children. The study is the first of its kind to focus on common techniques used to promote food to children on
television.
“Addressing this issue would make a meaningful contribution to curbing the international obesity epidemic besieging
children throughout the world,” says Dr Jenkin.
The research has been published in the latest edition of the international journal Obesity Reviews.