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Medicineworld.org: Alcohol advertising reaching too many teens on cable
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Alcohol advertising reaching too many teens on cable
A newly released study from the Center on Alcohol Marketing and Youth, in collaboration with UCLA, has found a striking connection between teenage viewership and the frequency of alcohol advertising on cable television. The findings show that ads for beer, spirits and "alcopop" aired much more frequently when more teens were watching.
"Alcohol advertisers have pledged to avoid audiences made up of more than 30 percent underage viewers such as children's programming," said David H. Jernigan, director of the Center on Alcohol Marketing and Youth and an associate professor at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. "However, a number of other shows have adolescent appeal. This research suggests that ads are aimed at groups that include a disproportionate number of teens and that the alcohol industry's voluntary self-monitoring is not working to reduce adolescent exposure to ads." Using advertising industry data from Nielsen Media Research, scientists examined all 600,000 national cable alcohol ads shown from 2001 through 2006 to audiences with less than 30 percent of viewers between the ages of 12 and 20. Among the findings:.
"This study did not examine whether alcohol advertisers are intentionally overexposing adolescents," said lead study author Dr. Paul J. Chung, assistant professor of pediatrics at Mattel Children's Hospital UCLA and a senior natural scientist at the RAND Corp. "The alcohol industry has consistently denied actively targeting teens, and our study isn't designed to test that claim. However, the ultimate effect of their advertising strategies, intentional or not, may be greater exposure than might be expected if adults were the sole targets of ads." For years, alcohol has been the substance of abuse most usually used by teens in the United States, and the public health consequences of underage drinking are considerable. Numerous studies and national statistics report that adolescents are involved in a significant proportion of the injuries, violence and crime that stem from binge drinking and other forms of alcohol abuse. Moreover, studies have shown that starting to drink as an adolescent has been linked with much greater risks of lifelong problem drinking. Multiple studies suggest that alcohol ads can have substantial influence on underage drinking attitudes and behaviors. "It's difficult to document experimentally," said Chung, who also directs the UCLARAND Center for Adolescent Health Promotion. "But there's not too much doubt that advertising and marketing affect the behavior of both children and adults. Common sense tells us that if it didn't work, companies probably wouldn't be spending so much money on it. So, it's a lot harder for parents, teachers and clinicians to successfully encourage kids to delay drinking when so a number of things they're seeing on television, on billboards, on movie screens, on the Internet are telling them otherwise." Posted by: Janet Source
Did you know?
A newly released study from the Center on Alcohol Marketing and Youth, in collaboration with UCLA, has found a striking connection between teenage viewership and the frequency of alcohol advertising on cable television. The findings show that ads for beer, spirits and "alcopop" aired much more frequently when more teens were watching.
Medicineworld.org: Alcohol advertising reaching too many teens on cable
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