ScienceDaily (Apr. 29, 2012) — There is a long-held concern
that youths who eat a lot of fast food are at risk for becoming overweight. New
research presented April 29, at the Pediatric Academic Societies (PAS) annual
meeting in Boston shows that greater familiarity with fast-food restaurant
advertising on television is associated with obesity in young people. Ya think? Maybe it's time to turn off the TV all together. Check out this post on thinking outside the idiot box.

"We know that children and adolescents are highly
exposed to fast-food restaurant advertising, particularly on television. This
study links obesity in young people to familiarity with this advertising,
suggesting that youth who are aware of and receptive to televised fast-food
marketing may be at risk for health consequences," said lead author Auden
C. McClure, MD, MPH, FAAP, assistant professor in the Department of Pediatrics
at Children's Hospital at Dartmouth, Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center.
Previous research has shown that watching TV is associated
with obesity. Dr. McClure and her colleagues sought to determine whether
recognition of fast-food ads on TV is associated with obesity in adolescents
and young adults.
The researchers surveyed a national sample of 3,342 youths
ages 15 to 23 years. Participants were asked about their height, weight, age,
gender, race, socioeconomic status, exercise, consumption of soda or sweet
drinks, frequency of eating at quick-service restaurants, how many hours they watched
TV each day, and whether they snacked while watching TV.
They also were shown 20 still images selected from television
ads for top quick-service restaurants that aired in the year before the survey.
The images were digitally edited to remove the brands. Individuals were asked
if they remembered seeing the ad, if they liked the ad and if they could name
the restaurant brand. In addition, they were shown 20 ads for alcohol.
Results showed that about 18 percent of participants surveyed
were overweight, and 15 percent were obese. The percentage of youths who were
obese was significantly higher among those who recognized more ads than those
who recognized few ads (17 percent vs. 8.3 percent). Even after controlling for
the variables listed above, youths who recognized many ads were more than twice
as likely to be obese compared with those who recognized few ads.
"A similar association with obesity was not found for
familiarity with televised alcohol ads, suggesting that the relationship was
specific to fast-food advertising content," Dr. McClure said. "After
accounting for overall TV time, TV ad familiarity was still linked with obesity
suggesting that this finding is not simply due to increased sedentary time or
an effect of TV programming."
However, eating more frequently at fast-food restaurants
depicted in the ads was not associated with obesity.
"The relation between fast-food marketing and obesity is
not simply that it prompts more quick-serve restaurant visits," said study
co-author James D. Sargent, MD, FAAP, professor in the Department of Pediatrics
at Children's Hospital at Dartmouth. Instead, "individuals who are more
familiar with these ads may have food consumption patterns that include many
types of high-calorie food brands, or they may be especially sensitive to
visual cues to eat while watching TV. More research is necessary to determine
how fast-food ad familiarity is linked to obesity," he added.
"Given the broad exposure of youth to advertising, the
more we know about how media and marketing affect young people, the better
equipped we are as pediatricians and parents to guide them in making healthy
diet choices," Dr. McClure concluded.





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