AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study focused on analyzing food and beverage advertisements at bus shelters in deprived areas of the UK, specifically Middlesbrough and Redcar and Cleveland, to determine the health standards of the products and their appeal to young people.
  • - Researchers collected images of these ads, finding that nearly 49% featured food or drinks, with 35.1% considered less healthy; most ads employed persuasive strategies intended to attract children and teens.
  • - The findings suggest that bus shelter advertising is prevalent and often promotes less healthy options, raising concerns that such ads should be examined in discussions about limiting unhealthy food marketing, particularly aimed at children.

Article Abstract

Objective: To quantify the extent of food and beverage advertising on bus shelters in a deprived area of the UK, to identify the healthfulness of advertised products, and any differences by level of deprivation. The study also sought to assess the creative strategies used and extent of appeal to young people.

Design: Images of bus shelter advertisements were collected via in person photography (in 2019) and Google Street View (photos recorded in 2018). Food and beverage advertisements were grouped into one of seventeen food categories and classified as healthy/less healthy using the UK Nutrient Profile Model. The deprivation level of the advertisement location was identified using the UK Index of Multiple Deprivation.

Setting: Middlesbrough and Redcar and Cleveland in South Teesside.

Participants: N/A.

Results: Eight hundred and thirty-two advertisements were identified, almost half (48·9 %) of which were for foods or beverages. Of food and non-alcoholic beverage adverts, 35·1 % were less healthy. Most food advertisements (98·9 %) used at least one of the persuasive creative strategies. Food advertisements were found to be of appeal to children under 18 years of age (71·9 %). No differences in healthiness of advertised foods were found by level of deprivation.

Conclusions: Food advertising is extensive on bus shelters in parts of the UK, and a substantial proportion of this advertising is classified as less healthy and would not be permitted to be advertised around television programming for children. Bus shelter advertising should be considered part of the UK policy deliberations around restricting less healthy food marketing exposure.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9991712PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S1368980021005048DOI Listing

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