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Counter-advertising may reduce parent's susceptibility to front-of-package promotions on unhealthy foods
- Source :
- Journal of nutrition education and behavior. 46(6)
- Publication Year :
- 2013
-
Abstract
- Objective Assess the effect of counter-advertisements on parents' appraisals of unhealthy foods featuring front-of-package promotions (FOPPs). Design A 2 × 2 × 5 between-subjects Web-based experiment. Parents were randomly shown an advertisement (counter-advertisement challenging FOPP/control advertisement) and then a pair of food products from the same category: an unhealthy product featuring an FOPP (nutrient content claim/sports celebrity endorsement) and a healthier control product with no FOPP. Setting Australia. Participants A total of 1,269 Australian-based parents of children aged 5–12 years recruited from an online panel. Main Outcome Measures Parents nominated which product they would prefer to buy and which they thought was healthier, then rated the unhealthy product and FOPP on various characteristics. Analysis Differences between advertisement conditions were assessed using logistic regression (product choice tasks) and analysis of variance tests (ratings of unhealthy product and FOPP). Results Compared with parents who saw a control advertisement, parents who saw a counter-advertisement perceived unhealthy products featuring FOPPs as less healthy, expressed weaker intentions for buying such products, and were more likely to read the nutrition facts panel before nominating choices (all P Conclusions and Implications Counter-advertising may help reduce the misleading influence of unhealthy food marketing and improve the accuracy of parents' evaluations of how nutritious promoted food products are.
- Subjects :
- Male
Parents
Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
Famous Persons
Control (management)
Medicine (miscellaneous)
Child Nutrition Sciences
Nutrition facts label
Nutrition Policy
Patient Education as Topic
Front of package
Medicine
Humans
Product (category theory)
Child
Internet
Nutrition and Dietetics
biology
business.industry
Athletes
Fraud
Outcome measures
Australia
Food Packaging
Advertising
biology.organism_classification
Product choice
Child, Preschool
Fast Foods
Female
business
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 18782620
- Volume :
- 46
- Issue :
- 6
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of nutrition education and behavior
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....aac1e2ed5e13bf0ef5e066b86d9f263f