Oct.
3 - Targeted Marketing of High-Calorie Foods Promotes Unhealthy
Eating Habits Among African Americans
Targeted marketing of high-calorie foods and beverages exposes
African Americans—compared to Caucasians or the general
population—to more unhealthy messages about eating and
limits their access to healthy foods finds a new study by Sonya
Grier, an associate professor of marketing at American University’s
Kogod School of Business.
The overall effects of these marketing strategies may contribute
to the significantly higher rates of obesity among African Americans
than among Caucasians, said Grier.
“It’s hard to make healthy choices when all the
signals and supports in your environment tell you to do just
the opposite,” she said. “One way to make a dent
in the obesity epidemic is to reverse those messages so that
marketing efforts support healthier eating among African Americans.”
The study, funded by the University of Pennsylvania’s
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, is the first to take a comprehensive
view of food marketing strategies aimed at African Americans.
Study researchers considered the four “Ps” used
by food and beverage marketers to reach particular target markets:
1. Products that are offered to a market
2. Promotions, including advertising and other types of persuasive
communication
3. Place, referring to the distribution and availability of
specific products
4. Price
The researchers conducted a systematic review of published
studies to identify the 20 that permitted comparisons of food
and beverage marketing strategies to African Americans versus
other groups. Despite a limited evidence base, they found that
African Americans are more frequently exposed to food promotion
and distribution patterns that support unhealthy eating habits.
Grier says that food companies and marketers should consider
how targeted marketing strategies may contribute to racial and
ethnic disparities in obesity. In addition, she recommends that
African American media pursue healthier product sponsors and
actively seek out healthy food promotions, and that communities
advocate for greater access to healthy foods, including supermarkets
and farmers’ markets.
The study, “The Context for Choice: Health Implications
of Targeted Food and Beverage Marketing to African Americans,”
was published in the September 2008 issue of the American
Journal of Public Health. It was coauthored by
Shiriki K. Kumanyika, a professor of epidemiology at the University
of Pennsylvania School of Medicine.
American University’s Kogod School of Business, founded
in 1955, is the oldest business school in Washington, D.C.,
and is accredited by the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools
of Business. The school is named in honor of its generous benefactors,
Robert and Arlene Kogod. Dedicated to providing an interdisciplinary
business education, Kogod offers undergraduate and graduate
degree programs that leverage the expertise of the business
community to create market-driven programs that produce outstanding
candidates prepared for productive careers in the global business
environment.
Source: American University
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