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Regulation of Baby Food Marketing in Thailand: A NetCode analysis

journal contribution
posted on 2023-02-09, 22:26 authored by Nisachol Cetthakrikul, M Kelly, C Banwell, Phillip Baker, Julie P. Smith
Objective: To report on the prevalence of different types of breast-milk substitutes (BMS) marketing and the compliance of such marketing with the "Control of Marketing of Infant and Young Child Food Act 2017"(The Act) and the "International Code of Marketing of Breastmilk Substitutes (WHO Code)"in Thailand. Design: Cross-sectional quantitative study, guided by the WHO/UNICEF NetCode Periodic Assessment Protocol. Setting: Health facilities and retail outlets in Bangkok, Thai media. Participants and data sources: Mothers of 0-2-year-old children, health professionals, promotions at retail outlets and health facilities, product labels, marketing on television and the internet. Results: Marketing to mothers was highly prevalent, mostly from electronic or digital media, while BMS companies provided items to health professionals to distribute to mothers. Promotional materials in health facilities displayed company brands or logos. At retail outlets, most promotions were price-related. Around two-fifths of labels contained nutrition or health claims. Television marketing was growing-up-milk advertisements, while internet promotions were varied from price-related materials to product reviews. Most instances of non-compliant BMS marketing with the Act were advertisements to mothers, and most were infant formula. Most non-compliant BMS marketing with the WHO Code was mainly concerned growing-up milks, which are not covered by the Act and appeared in the media. Conclusions: BMS marketing does not fully comply with the Act or the WHO Code. The Thai government should conduct regular monitoring and enforcement activities, educate health professionals, and strengthen the Act's provisions on the media and growing-up milk to fully align with the WHO Code.

History

Journal

Public Health Nutrition

ISSN

1368-9800

eISSN

1475-2727