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Children's Ads Show Lots of Junk Food

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Children’s Ads Show Lots of Junk Food

 WASHINGTON, D.C. (AP) — In a child’s buffet of food commercials, more than 40 percent of the dishes are candy, snacks, and fast food. Nowhere to be found: fresh fruit, vegetables, poultry, or seafood.

For years, health officials have warned that kids were being inundated with commercials about not-so-healthy foods. Now, researchers have put numbers to those warnings in the largest-ever study of commercials aimed at children.

“The vast majority of the foods that kids see advertised on television today are for products that nutritionists would tell us they need to be eating less of, not more of, if we’re going to get a handle on childhood obesity,” said Vicki Rideout of the Kaiser Family Foundation, which conducts health research.

Overall, the foundation’s researchers monitored 13 television networks. The viewing took place primarily between late May and early September 2005. They saw 2,613 ads featuring food and drinks that targeted children and teens.

Children ages 8–12 see the most food ads on TV — an average of 21 a day, or 7,600 a year. Teenagers see slightly fewer, 17 a day, or about 6,000 a year; and children ages 2–7 see the fewest, 12 a day or 4,400 a year.

“Since [preteens] are at an age where they’re just becoming independent consumers, understanding what type of advertising they are exposed to is especially important,” Ms Rideout said.

In December 2005, the Institute of Medicine concluded that marketing practices from the food and beverage industry are out of balance with recommended diets for children and contribute to an environment that puts children’s health at risk.

The institute recommended that companies shift their advertising to emphasize food and drink that are substantially lower in calories, fats, salt, and sugars.

On November, 10 major food and drink makers, including companies such as McDonald’s, The Coca-Cola Co. (KO) and PepsiCo Inc (PEP), agreed to adopt new voluntary rules for advertising. The companies said they would devote at least half their advertising directed to children to promote healthier diets and lifestyles.

The rules have not gone into effect yet. However, researchers believe that the study released Tuesday will serve as an important benchmark that will help determine whether the voluntary guidelines lead to any significant changes in advertising content.

Senator Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, said he hoped the study would also prove helpful to a new Federal Communications Commission task force examining the impact of the media on childhood obesity rates.

“We now have data that conclusively shows kids are seeing an overwhelming number of ads for unhealthy food on all types of TV shows,” Sen Harkin said. “The ‘childhood obesity epidemic’ isn’t just a catch phrase. It’s a real public health crisis.”

The study also recorded the number of public service announcements that children watch on television. The report said that expectations for educational campaigns affecting child obesity rates should be tempered.

Children see few public service announcements compared to food ads. Children under age 8 see one announcement on fitness or nutrition for every 26 food ads. For preteens, it’s one announcement for every 48 food ads. And for teens, the ratio is one public service announcement for every 130 food ads.

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