Food marketing to children complaints registry-helping parents navigate self-regulation

2010 ◽  
Vol 4 ◽  
pp. S24-S25
Author(s):  
Wendy Watson ◽  
Kathy Chapman ◽  
Nicola Ingold ◽  
Sarah Mackay ◽  
Jane Martin
2010 ◽  
Vol 21 (3) ◽  
pp. 229-235 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lana Hebden ◽  
Lesley King ◽  
Bridget Kelly ◽  
Kathy Chapman ◽  
Christine Innes-Hughes

2015 ◽  
Vol 49 (2) ◽  
pp. 181-187 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dale L. Kunkel ◽  
Jessica S. Castonguay ◽  
Christine R. Filer

Author(s):  
SeeHoe Ng ◽  
Bridget Kelly ◽  
Heather Yeatman ◽  
Boyd Swinburn ◽  
Tilakavati Karupaiah

Unhealthy food marketing shapes children’s preference towards obesogenic foods. In Malaysia, policies regulating this food marketing were rated as poor compared to global standards, justifying the need to explore barriers and facilitators during policy development and implementation processes. The case study incorporated qualitative methods, including historical mapping, semi-structured interviews with key informants and a search of cited documents. Nine participants were interviewed, representing the Federal government (n = 5), food industry (n = 2) and civil society (n = 2). Even though the mandatory approach to government-led regulation of food marketing to children was the benchmark, more barriers than facilitators in the policy process led to industry self-regulations in Malaysia. Cited barriers were the lack of political will, industry resistance, complexity of legislation, technical challenges, and lack of resources, particularly professional skills. The adoption of industry self-regulation created further barriers to subsequent policy advancement. These included implementer indifference (industry), lack of monitoring, poor stakeholder relations, and policy characteristics linked to weak criteria and voluntary uptake. These underlying barriers, together with a lack of sustained public health advocacy, exacerbated policy inertia. Key recommendations include strengthening pro-public health stakeholder partnerships, applying sustained efforts in policy advocacy to overcome policy inertia, and conducting monitoring for policy compliance and accountability. These form the key lessons for advocating policy reforms.


2014 ◽  
Vol 19 (3) ◽  
pp. 263-292 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dale Kunkel ◽  
Jessica Castonguay ◽  
Paul J. Wright ◽  
Christopher J. McKinley

2009 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 409-417 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jennifer L Harris ◽  
Marlene B Schwartz ◽  
Kelly D Brownell

AbstractObjectiveTo analyse cross-promotions targeted to children and adolescents on packaging in the supermarket.DesignOn three occasions from 2006 to 2008, researchers purchased all foods in a large supermarket that included a cross-promotion on the package. A total of 397 products were categorized by promotional partner, food category, targeted age group, promotion type, product nutrition, and company policies on marketing to children.ResultsThe number of products with youth-oriented cross-promotions increased by 78 % during the period examined. Overall, 71 % of cross-promotions involved third-party licensed characters and 57 % appealed primarily to children under 12 years of age; however, the use of other forms of promotions increased from 5 % of the total in 2006 to 53 % in 2008, and promotions targeting pre-school and general audiences increased from 23 % to 54 % of the total. Only 18 % of products met accepted nutrition standards for foods sold to youth, and nutritional quality declined during the period examined. Food manufacturers with policies limiting marketing to children represented 65 % of all youth-oriented cross-promotions, their use of cross-promotions increased significantly, and the nutritional quality of their products did not improve. Some media companies did reduce the use of their properties on food promotions.ConclusionsOverall, the supermarket environment worsened due to an increase in cross-promotions targeted to children and adolescents and a decline in the nutritional quality of these products. This analysis failed to find improvements in food marketing to youth and highlights the need to expand current industry self-regulatory pledges.


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