Food-brand knowledge predicts what kids will ask for later, said
lead author Mimi Tatlow-Golden of the School of Psychology at
University College Dublin.
The study included 172 children in Ireland, ages three to five years
old, a quarter of whom were from Northern Ireland, where marketing
regulations differ from the rest of the country.
Just over half of the kids attended school in a disadvantaged
community, according to local government and education department
data.
Parents filled out questionnaires about family demographics, eating
habits and children’s TV viewing alone and with others.
Researchers surveyed the kids at school one at a time, showing them
nine food brand logos and product images, four belonging to healthy
foods and five to less healthy foods, all of which are widely
advertised in Ireland.
The researchers first asked kids if they knew the brand name of a
food based on the logo, then if they knew what kind of food it was,
then if they could match the brand logo to a picture of the correct
food product.
Kids’ scores on the brand questions rose for all types of foods
between ages three and five, the authors report in the journal
Appetite. On average, kids could name about a third of the brands,
name the product type of half the brands and correctly match the
images of almost two-thirds of the brands.
At all ages, kids were better at recognizing the less healthy foods.
Their knowledge of unhealthy foods was most strongly predicted by
how much unhealthy food their parents ate, and was not predicted by
TV time or their mother’s education level, the researchers found.
“We definitely couldn’t conclude that marketing doesn’t work, we
just need to look beyond TV,” Sandra Jones, director of the Center
for Health Initiatives at the University of Wollongong in Australia,
told Reuters Health.
Some of the healthy brands in the study, like Frube flavored yogurt
in a tube and Cheestring string cheese, only refer to one specific
food product, whereas the unhealthy brands, which included
Cadbury’s, McDonalds and Coca-Cola, produce a wide range of
products, she noted. This could have skewed the results, said Jones,
who was not involved in the research.
Although parents’ eating habits were the most important predictor of
what kids recognized, advertising affects parental eating as well,
Tatlow-Golden said.
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In Ireland unhealthy and healthy foods get about equal advertising
airtime on TV, she said, though there are many other avenues of
advertising and ways kids are exposed to brands.
“What are kids seeing with their friends at school, or seeing out on
the street or seeing displayed in the store?” she said.
Fat and sugar are inherently appealing to the human palate, so even
with an equal amount of exposure to both healthy and unhealthy
foods, that might explain the difference in recall, she noted.
“In the states even where we’ve got some regulation happening, 80
percent of foods advertised are unhealthy,” Tatlow-Golden said.
“Here it’s 50 percent, and we would say that’s still way too much.”
Advertising makes unhealthy foods seem like something kids should
want and something that will make them happy, and parents often end
up limiting those foods and positioning them as a “treat,” which can
play into kids’ heightened awareness of things like McDonalds, Jones
noted.
“When we say, ‘all that parents have to do is say no’ I think that
totally oversimplifies the situation,” she said. “It’s really hard
to say no.”
While we like to think our relationships to brands are logical, they
are really very emotional, she said, and ubiquitous marketing starts
laying the foundation for that relationship very early on. It’s a
hard force for parents to try to fight, but they should in any case
be aware of what’s happening, she said.
“Brands think, if you can get them when they’re young, when they’re
three, you’ve got a friend for life,” Jones said.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1mMSbsH Appetite, online May 21, 2014.
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