| Pediatricians Blast
Inappropriate Ads LINDSEY TANNER, The
Associated Press
12/04/06
CHICAGO -- Inappropriate advertising contributes to
many kids' ills, from obesity to anorexia, to drinking
booze and having sex too soon, and Congress should crack
down on it, the American Academy of Pediatrics said today.
The influential doctors' group issued a new policy
statement in response to what it calls a rising tide of
advertising aimed at children. The policy appears in
December's Pediatrics.
"Young people view more than 40,000 ads per year on
television alone and increasingly are being exposed to
advertising on the Internet, in magazines and in schools,"
the policy says.
Advertising examples cited in the statement include TV
commercials for sugary breakfast cereals and high-calorie
snacks shown during children's programs and ads for Viagra
and other erectile dysfunction drugs shown during
televised sports games.
Influencing kids: The statement also is critical
of alcohol ads that feature cartoonish animal characters;
fast-food ads on educational TV shown in schools; magazine
ads with stick-thin models, and toy and other product
"tie-ins" between popular movie characters and fast-food
restaurants.
These pervasive ads influence kids to demand poor food
choices, and to think drinking is cool, sex is a
recreational activity and anorexia is fashionable, the
academy says.
Interactive digital TV, expected to arrive in a few
years, will spread the problem, allowing kids to click
on-screen links to Web-based promotions, the new policy
says.
In response, the academy says doctors should ask
Congress and federal agencies to:
--- ban junk-food ads during shows geared toward young
children;
--- limit commercial advertising to no more than 6
minutes per hour, a decrease of 50 percent;
--- restrict alcohol ads to showing only the product,
not cartoon characters or attractive young women;
--- prohibit interactive advertising to children on
digital TV.
The academy also says TV ads for erectile dysfunction
drugs should be shown only after 10 p.m.
Looking to parents: Jeff Becker, president of
the Beer Institute, an industry group for breweries, said
parents have more influence than advertising on teens'
decisions to drink. He also said brewers work to ensure
that beer ads appear in adult-oriented media. For much of
the sports programming where beer ads appear, most viewers
are at least 21, Becker said.
"The American Academy of Pediatrics is wrong to blame
alcohol advertising for the actions of underage teens who
willingly break the law to drink illegally," he said.
Critics of advertising restrictions say it's a
free-speech issue. But the academy notes that several
Western countries, including Sweden, Norway, Denmark,
Belgium and Greece, limit ads directed at children.
"What kind of society exploits its children and
teenagers for money? This is an example of where public
health really has to trump capitalism," said Dr. Victor
Strasburger, lead author of the policy statement and an
adolescent medicine specialist at the University of New
Mexico in Albuquerque.
Advertising aimed at children has come under increasing
scrutiny in recent years, particularly because of data
showing that growing numbers of U.S. children -- now about
17 percent -- are obese.
Spokespeople for Viacom, whose holdings include TV's
Nickelodeon network and MTV, declined to offer immediate
comment on the report. Viacom has urged its marketing
partners to advertise healthier products and is among
media companies that have been involved in discussions
with federal agencies and advocacy groups about
advertisers marketing to children.
While hard scientific data linking advertising with
children's health ills is lacking, Strasburger said
there's compelling circumstantial evidence suggesting
there's a connection.
Last year, the Institute of Medicine agreed that
evidence suggesting that TV ads contribute to childhood
obesity is compelling and said the industry should market
healthy foods to kids.
In September, the Federal Communications Commission
said it will study potential links between TV ads and
rising rates of obesity in U.S. children.
The food industry has started to respond.
Two weeks ago, McDonald's joined nine major food and
drink companies in vowing to promote more healthy foods
and exercise in their child-oriented advertising. And last
year Kraft Foods said it would curb ads to young children
for snack foods including Oreos and Kool-Aid.
Harvard psychologist Susan Linn, a co-founder of the
Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood, praised the
academy's policy and said it doesn't overstate the effects
of advertising on children.
"I'm hopeful that policymakers will listen," Linn said.
Self-regulation in the food industry, without a nudge from
government, won't work, she said. |