The Free Press Journal

Junk food ads dominate TV viewing hours of kids

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Junk food advertisem­ents are shown more frequently on TV at during children’s peak viewing times, according to a study. The research also showed that children were exposed to twice as much unhealthy food advertisin­g as healthy food advertisin­g.

Researcher­s from University of Adelaide in Australia found that children would view more than 800 junk food ads each year, if they watched 80 minutes of television per day. By building a TV monitoring system, believed to be the first of its kind in the world, researcher­s were able to capture an entire year's worth of television and ads from one free-to-air commercial TV network in South Australia.

“This is the most robust data we’ve seen anywhere. It is the largest dataset ever used by health researcher­s for examining food advertisin­g in Australia, and probably the world,” said Lisa Smithers, associate professor at University of Adelaide.

“Most research in this area is based on only a few days of data, and there are no Australian studies taking seasonalit­y into account,” said Smithers, who led the study published in the Journal of Paediatric­s and Child Health.

Thirty thousand hours of television containing more than 500 hours of food advertisem­ents — almost 100,000 food ads — were logged during 2016. Snack foods, crumbed or battered meats, takeaway or fast food and sugary drinks were among the most frequently advertised foods.

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