Beverage industry TV advertising shifts after a stepwise mandatory food marketing restriction: achievements and challenges with regulating the food marketing environment
Keywords: Beverage industry; Child, directed marketing; Food environment; Food marketing regulation
Abstract
Objective: Sugar-sweetened beverages (SSB) are heavily advertised globally, and SSB consumption is linked to increased health risk. To reduce unhealthy food marketing, Chile implemented a regulation for products classified as high in energies, sugar, saturated fat or sodium, starting with a 2016 ban on child-targeted advertising of these products and adding a 06.0022.00 daytime advertising ban in 2019. This study assesses changes in television advertising prevalence of ready-to-drink beverages, including and beyond SSB, to analyse how the beverage industry shifted its marketing strategies across Chiles implementation phases. Design: Beverage advertisements were recorded during two randomly constructed weeks in April-May of 2016 (pre-implementation) through 2019 (daytime ban). Ad products were classified as high-in or non-high-in according to regulation nutrient thresholds. Ads were analysed for their programme placement and marketing content. Setting: Chile. Results: From pre-regulation to daytime ban, child-targeted, daytime and total ads decreased by 51·8 percentage points (p.p.), 51·5 p.p. and 61·8 p.p. for high-in products and increased by 62·9 p.p., 54·9 p.p. and 61·8 p.p. for non-high-in products (Ps < 0·001). Additionally, total ready-to-drink beverage ads increased by 5·4 p.p. and brand-only ads (no product shown) by 7 p.p. Conclusions: After the regulation implementation, high-in ads fell significantly, but non-high-in ads rose and continued using strategies targeting children and being aired during daytime. Given research showing that advertising one product can increase preferences for a different product from that same brand and product categories, broader food marketing regulation approaches may be needed to protect children from the harmful effects of food marketing. © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Nutrition Society.
Más información
| Título según WOS: | Beverage industry TV advertising shifts after a stepwise mandatory food marketing restriction: achievements and challenges with regulating the food marketing environment |
| Título según SCOPUS: | Beverage industry TV advertising shifts after a stepwise mandatory food marketing restriction: achievements and challenges with regulating the food marketing environment |
| Título de la Revista: | Public Health Nutrition |
| Volumen: | 27 |
| Número: | 1 |
| Editorial: | Cambridge University Press |
| Fecha de publicación: | 2024 |
| Idioma: | English |
| DOI: |
10.1017/S1368980023002872 |
| Notas: | ISI, SCOPUS |