More children are watching junk-food adverts despite ban
Sarah Cassidy
The Independent (UK)
April 7, 2008
Government attempts
to fight childhood obesity by banning adverts for junk
food is being hampered by such programmes as The X
Factor and Ant and Dec's Saturday Night Takeaway, the
Prime Minister's adviser on obesity has admitted.
A ban was introduced in January on adverts for foods
high in salt, sugar or fat during programmes whose
viewers were mainly under the age of 16. It did not,
however, affect the programmes with an audience mainly
made up of adults, even though many more children watch
them.
Among the programmes affected was the children's cartoon
SpongeBob Squarepants, which attracts about 170,000
child viewers. But Saturday Night Takeaway, a family
show watched by more than a million children, was not.
New research has concluded the number of times children
watch junk-food adverts during these family programmes
has risen in the past two years by 26 per cent. The
figures come from Dr Will Cavendish, director of health
and wellbeing at the Department of Health, who described
the trend as "worrying" at a time when almost a third of
11-year-olds are classified as overweight or obese.
In a report to the Westminster Food & Nutrition Forum,
Dr Cavendish said ministers could take tougher action.
"We know large numbers of children are still seeing TV
ads for high fat, sugar and salt food and drink, though
in programmes not specifically aimed at children," he
wrote.
The figures will fuel calls for a total ban on junk food
ads before the 9pm watershed. A private member's Bill to
that effect, introduced by the Labour MP Nigel
Griffiths, will receive its second reading this month.
It aims also to create "significant restrictions" on
marketing on the internet.
The limitations of the current ban were predicted last
year by a Which? study that found none of the top 20
shows and only seven of the top 50 shows watched by
children would be free of adverts for junk food.
