The Devil is in the Detail: Challenging the UK Department of Health’s 2019 Impact Assessment of the Extent of Online Marketing of Unhealthy Foods to Children
Background: How much unhealthy marketing do children see on digital devices? Marketing of unhealthy food and beverages has long been identified as a factor in children’s preferences, purchase requests and consumption. Rising global obesity mandates States to craft environments that protect children...
Main Authors: | , |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
MDPI AG
2020-10-01
|
Series: | International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/17/19/7231 |
id |
doaj-c9ba69fc1eee4427a79da519f0f29c34 |
---|---|
record_format |
Article |
spelling |
doaj-c9ba69fc1eee4427a79da519f0f29c342020-11-25T02:31:03ZengMDPI AGInternational Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health1661-78271660-46012020-10-01177231723110.3390/ijerph17197231The Devil is in the Detail: Challenging the UK Department of Health’s 2019 Impact Assessment of the Extent of Online Marketing of Unhealthy Foods to ChildrenMimi Tatlow-Golden0Daniel Parker1Faculty of Wellbeing, Education and Language Studies, The Open University, Milton Keynes MK7 6AA, UKLiving Loud, Brighton, Sussex BN1 3SU, UKBackground: How much unhealthy marketing do children see on digital devices? Marketing of unhealthy food and beverages has long been identified as a factor in children’s preferences, purchase requests and consumption. Rising global obesity mandates States to craft environments that protect children and young people’s health, as recommended by the World Health Organization, among others. However, assessing the impact of marketing restrictions is particularly challenging: the complexity of digital advertising markets means that measurement challenges are profound. In 2019, the UK Department of Health published an Impact Assessment that applied a novel method aiming to calculate costs and benefits of restricting unhealthy food and beverage advertising on digital devices (planned for implementation by 2022). It estimated UK digital unhealthy marketing to children at 0.73 billion advertising impressions annually, compared to television impacts of 3.6 billion. <span style="color: windowtext;">Aim and Method: We assessed this conclusion by reviewing the UK Department of Health/Kantar Consulting’s Online Baseline Methodology (the “Government Model”). We examined the model’s underlying premise and specified the seven analytic steps undertaken. For each step, we reviewed industry and academic evidence to test its assumptions and the validity of data applied. Results: We found that, in each step, the Government Model’s assumptions, and the data sources selected, result in underestimates of the scale of digital advertising of unhealthy foods—at least tenfold, if not substantially more. The model’s underlying premise is also problematic, as digital advertising <i>spend data</i> relate poorly to digital advertising <i>exposure</i>, leading to further underestimation of market scale. Conclusion: We conclude that the Government Model very substantially underestimates the impact of digital unhealthy food advertising restrictions on health. This analysis has relevance for global policy and for the impact of regulation on children’s health and well-being.</span>https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/17/19/7231advertisingmarketingregulationpolicychildrenadolescent |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Mimi Tatlow-Golden Daniel Parker |
spellingShingle |
Mimi Tatlow-Golden Daniel Parker The Devil is in the Detail: Challenging the UK Department of Health’s 2019 Impact Assessment of the Extent of Online Marketing of Unhealthy Foods to Children International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health advertising marketing regulation policy children adolescent |
author_facet |
Mimi Tatlow-Golden Daniel Parker |
author_sort |
Mimi Tatlow-Golden |
title |
The Devil is in the Detail: Challenging the UK Department of Health’s 2019 Impact Assessment of the Extent of Online Marketing of Unhealthy Foods to Children |
title_short |
The Devil is in the Detail: Challenging the UK Department of Health’s 2019 Impact Assessment of the Extent of Online Marketing of Unhealthy Foods to Children |
title_full |
The Devil is in the Detail: Challenging the UK Department of Health’s 2019 Impact Assessment of the Extent of Online Marketing of Unhealthy Foods to Children |
title_fullStr |
The Devil is in the Detail: Challenging the UK Department of Health’s 2019 Impact Assessment of the Extent of Online Marketing of Unhealthy Foods to Children |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Devil is in the Detail: Challenging the UK Department of Health’s 2019 Impact Assessment of the Extent of Online Marketing of Unhealthy Foods to Children |
title_sort |
devil is in the detail: challenging the uk department of health’s 2019 impact assessment of the extent of online marketing of unhealthy foods to children |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health |
issn |
1661-7827 1660-4601 |
publishDate |
2020-10-01 |
description |
Background: How much unhealthy marketing do children see on digital devices? Marketing of unhealthy food and beverages has long been identified as a factor in children’s preferences, purchase requests and consumption. Rising global obesity mandates States to craft environments that protect children and young people’s health, as recommended by the World Health Organization, among others. However, assessing the impact of marketing restrictions is particularly challenging: the complexity of digital advertising markets means that measurement challenges are profound. In 2019, the UK Department of Health published an Impact Assessment that applied a novel method aiming to calculate costs and benefits of restricting unhealthy food and beverage advertising on digital devices (planned for implementation by 2022). It estimated UK digital unhealthy marketing to children at 0.73 billion advertising impressions annually, compared to television impacts of 3.6 billion. <span style="color: windowtext;">Aim and Method: We assessed this conclusion by reviewing the UK Department of Health/Kantar Consulting’s Online Baseline Methodology (the “Government Model”). We examined the model’s underlying premise and specified the seven analytic steps undertaken. For each step, we reviewed industry and academic evidence to test its assumptions and the validity of data applied. Results: We found that, in each step, the Government Model’s assumptions, and the data sources selected, result in underestimates of the scale of digital advertising of unhealthy foods—at least tenfold, if not substantially more. The model’s underlying premise is also problematic, as digital advertising <i>spend data</i> relate poorly to digital advertising <i>exposure</i>, leading to further underestimation of market scale. Conclusion: We conclude that the Government Model very substantially underestimates the impact of digital unhealthy food advertising restrictions on health. This analysis has relevance for global policy and for the impact of regulation on children’s health and well-being.</span> |
topic |
advertising marketing regulation policy children adolescent |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/17/19/7231 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT mimitatlowgolden thedevilisinthedetailchallengingtheukdepartmentofhealths2019impactassessmentoftheextentofonlinemarketingofunhealthyfoodstochildren AT danielparker thedevilisinthedetailchallengingtheukdepartmentofhealths2019impactassessmentoftheextentofonlinemarketingofunhealthyfoodstochildren AT mimitatlowgolden devilisinthedetailchallengingtheukdepartmentofhealths2019impactassessmentoftheextentofonlinemarketingofunhealthyfoodstochildren AT danielparker devilisinthedetailchallengingtheukdepartmentofhealths2019impactassessmentoftheextentofonlinemarketingofunhealthyfoodstochildren |
_version_ |
1724825653691285504 |