Jan. 25 - Marketing May Influence How Often Parents Feed Children
Fast Food
Marketing
may influence how often parents feed their children fast food,
according to a study by Sonya A. Grier, an associate professor
of marketing at American University’s Kogod School of
Business.
The study, titled “Fast-Food Marketing
and Children's Fast-Food Consumption: Exploring Parents' Influences
in an Ethnically Diverse Sample,” is in the current issue
of the American Marketing Association’s Journal
of Public Policy & Marketing.
“Obesity rates are significantly higher
among many ethnic groups other than non-Hispanic whites, particularly
African Americans, Hispanics, American Indians and Pacific Islanders”
Grier said. “Yet much research in marketing does not include
ethnically diverse samples.”
Grier and her co-authors designed a questionnaire
to obtain parents’ self-reports of fast-food access, exposure
to fast-food promotion, attitudes toward fast food, fast-food
social norms and their children’s fast food consumption.
The questionnaire was administered to parents of children ages
2 to 12 at eight community health centers in medically underserved
areas located on the United States’ East Coast and in
Puerto Rico. Such centers are funded by the Health Resources
and Services Administration and serve more than 14 million clients
with incomes below the federal poverty level, many of them minorities.
The questionnaire was administered to parents in the presence
of their children and in the parents’ preferred language
(English, Chinese or Spanish). Children were measured for height
and weight.
Parents’ reports of greater exposure to
fast-food promotion were linked to beliefs that eating fast
food is a regular practice of family, friends and others in
their communities. Reports of greater exposure to fast food
marketing were also linked to increased fast food intake among
children. Additionally, the more parents perceived fast-food
consumption as a socially normal behavior, the more frequently
their children ate fast food. This was true among the entire
sample, not just members of specific ethnic groups.
However, the study also identified how parents
of different ethnic groups varied in their perceptions of how
often they were exposed to fast-food marketing, as well as access,
attitudes, norms and consumption of fast food. Hispanics and
African Americans reported being exposed to more fast-food marketing
and having greater access (restaurants more conveniently located)
to fast-food than whites. Hispanics also reported significantly
more positive attitudes toward fast-food than did whites. Asian
parents expressed the least normative views of fast food consumption.
“It is important to examine group-level
influences on behavior in combination with the traditional focus
on individual influences on behavior,” Grier said.
Such research could help improve efforts to
prevent obesity, an area already of great interest to Grier.
She is also the co-investigator for a new African American Collaborative
Research Network (AACORN) study focused on developing community
action strategies to help prevent obesity in African American
children and teenagers. AACORN is based at the University of
Pennsylvania School of Medicine.
Source:American University
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