Comparison of child obesity prevention and control content in mainstream and Spanish-language US parenting magazines.

J Acad Nutr Diet

Nutrition and Health Promotion, Department of Nutrition, Simmons College, Boston, MA, USA.

Published: January 2013

AI Article Synopsis

  • Mass media coverage of child obesity is increasing, but research on its presence in parenting magazines, especially Spanish-language ones, is limited.
  • The study analyzed content from 68 mainstream and 20 Spanish-language parenting magazines, finding most articles emphasized parental behavior change over environmental factors, with only a small percentage addressing child obesity as a serious issue.
  • Cultural differences emerged, highlighting the importance of family and evolving health beliefs in Latino communities, and suggesting a need for better nutrition communication strategies to address childhood obesity as an environmental concern.

Article Abstract

Mass media coverage of child obesity is rising, paralleling the child obesity epidemic's growth, and there is evidence that parents seek parenting advice from media sources. Yet little to no research has examined the coverage of child obesity in parenting magazines or Spanish-language media. The purpose of this study was to use qualitative and quantitative content analysis methods to identify, quantify, and compare strategies for child obesity prevention and control presented in mainstream and Spanish-language US parenting magazines. Child obesity-related editorial content in 68 mainstream and 20 Spanish-language magazine issues published over 32 months was gathered. Magazine content was coded with a manual developed by refining themes from the sample and from an evidence-based child obesity prevention action plan. Seventy-three articles related to child obesity prevention and control were identified. Most focused on parental behavior change rather than environmental change, and only 3 in 10 articles referred to the social context in which parental behavior change takes place. Child obesity-focused articles were not given high prominence; only one in four articles in the entire sample referred to child obesity as a growing problem or epidemic. Key differences between genres reflect culturally important Latino themes, including family focus and changing health beliefs around child weight status. Given mass media's potential influence on parenting practices and public perceptions, nutrition communication professionals and registered dietitians need to work to reframe media coverage of childhood obesity as an environmental problem that requires broad-based policy solutions. Spanish-speaking media can be an ally in helping Latina women change cultural health beliefs around child weight status.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jand.2012.09.023DOI Listing

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