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Characterising Parent-Appeal Marketing on Foods for Children: A Scoping Review

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journal contribution
posted on 2025-04-04, 00:37 authored by Alexandra Chung, Kostas Hatzikiriakidis, Florentine MartinoFlorentine Martino, Helen Skouteris
Abstract Purpose of Review This scoping review examines current evidence on parent-appeal marketing on the front-of-pack of food products for children and the impacts on parents’ perceptions, intentions, and behaviours. Recent Findings Thirteen relevant studies were identified. Marketing features on packages of foods for children that appealed to parents include health claims, nutrition claims, non-nutrient claims such as 'natural', healthy-looking product images, images of healthy ingredients, and celebrity endorsements. At the same time, parents were wary of front-of-pack marketing and find it confusing, deceptive, and misleading. Child-appeal marketing features such as cartoon characters and bright colours gave parents the perception that products were unhealthy. Summary Overall, this scoping review offers important insights into the types of front-of-pack marketing that appeal to parents and offers an inventory of parent-appeal marketing features. These findings support the design and implementation of policies that aim to reduce commercial influences on children’s diets through stronger regulation of marketing of foods for children.

History

Journal

Current Nutrition Reports

Volume

13

Pagination

393-398

Location

Berlin, Germany

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

2161-3311

eISSN

2161-3311

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Publisher

Springer

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