Food marketing, eating and health outcomes in children and adults: a systematic review and meta-analysis

Boyland, Emma; Muc, Magdalena; Coates, Anna; Ells, Louisa; Halford, Jason C.G.; Hill, Zoe; Maden, Michelle; Matu, Jamie; Maynard, Maria J.; Rodgers, Jayne; Targett, Victoria; Tatlow-Golden, Mimi; Young, Michelle and Jones, Andrew (2024). Food marketing, eating and health outcomes in children and adults: a systematic review and meta-analysis. British Journal of Nutrition (In press).

Abstract

The marketing of unhealthy foods has been implicated in poor diet and rising levels of obesity. Rapid developments in the digital food marketing ecosystem and associated research means that contemporary review of the evidence is warranted. This preregistered (CRD420212337091) systematic review and meta-analysis aimed to provide an updated synthesis of the evidence for behavioural and health impacts of food marketing on both children and adults, using the 4Ps framework (Promotion, Product, Price, Place). Ten databases were searched from 2014-2021 for primary data articles of quantitative or mixed design, reporting on one or more outcome of interest following food marketing exposure compared with a relevant control. Reviews, abstracts, letters/editorials, and qualitative studies were excluded. Eighty-two studies were included in the narrative review and twenty-three in the meta-analyses. Study quality (RoB2/ Newcastle-Ottawa Scale) was mixed. Studies examined ‘promotion’ (n=55), ‘product’ (n=17), ‘price’ (n=15) and ‘place’ (n=2) (some >1 category). There is evidence of impacts of food marketing in multiple media and settings on outcomes including increased purchase intention, purchase requests, purchase, preference, choice, and consumption in children and adults. Meta-analysis demonstrated a significant impact of food marketing on increased choice of unhealthy foods (OR=2.45 [95%CI: 1.41-4.27], Z=3.18, p=0.002, I2=93.1%) and increased food consumption (SMD=0.311 [95%CI: 0.185-0.437], z=4.83, p<0.001, I2=53.0%). Evidence gaps were identified for the impact of brand only and outdoor streetscape food marketing, and for data on the extent to which food marketing may contribute to health inequalities which, if available, would support UK and international public health policy development.

Plain Language Summary

We synthesised the evidence for impact of food marketing in multiple media and settings. We found evidence of increases in purchase intention, purchase requests, purchase, preference, choice, and consumption in children and adults.

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