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Food and beverage cues in children’s television programmes: the influence of programme genre

The link between childhood obesity and both television viewing and television advertising have previously been examined. We sought to investigate the frequency and type of food and beverage placements in children-specific television broadcasts and, in particular, differences between programme genres...

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Published in:Public health nutrition 2016-03, Vol.19 (4), p.616-624
Main Authors: Scully, Paul, Reid, Orlaith, Macken, Alan, Healy, Mark, Saunders, Jean, Leddin, Des, Cullen, Walter, Dunne, Colum, O’Gorman, Clodagh S
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creator Scully, Paul
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description The link between childhood obesity and both television viewing and television advertising have previously been examined. We sought to investigate the frequency and type of food and beverage placements in children-specific television broadcasts and, in particular, differences between programme genres. Content of five weekdays of children-specific television broadcasting on both UK (BBC) and Irish (RTE) television channels was summarized. Food and beverage placements were coded based on type of product, product placement, product use and characters involved. A comparison was made between different programme genres: animated, cartoon, child-specific, film, quiz, tween and young persons' programming. A total of 1155 (BBC=450; RTE=705) cues were recorded giving a cue every 4·2 min, an average of 12·3 s/cue. The genre with most cues recorded was cartoon programming (30·8%). For the majority of genres, cues related to sweet snacks (range 1·8-23·3%) and sweets/candy (range 3·6-25·8%) featured highly. Fast-food (18·0%) and sugar-sweetened beverage (42·3%) cues were observed in a high proportion of tween programming. Celebratory/social motivation factors (range 10-40 %) were most common across all genres while there were low proportions of cues based on reward, punishment or health-related motivating factors. The study provides evidence for the prominence of energy-dense/nutrient-poor foods and beverages in children's programming. Of particular interest is the high prevalence of fast-food and sugar-sweetened beverage cues associated with tween programming. These results further emphasize the need for programme makers to provide a healthier image of foods and beverages in children's television.
doi_str_mv 10.1017/S1368980015001755
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identifier ISSN: 1368-9800
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source Cambridge Journals Online; PubMed Central
subjects Age
Beverages
Candy
Child
Children & youth
Childrens television
Cues
Diet
Dietary Sucrose
Fast food
Fast Foods
Food
Genre
Humans
Influence
Ireland
Marketing
Nutrition communication
Pediatric Obesity - etiology
Preferences
Research Papers
Snacks
Sugar
Television
Television advertising
United Kingdom
title Food and beverage cues in children’s television programmes: the influence of programme genre
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