Viewing obesogenic advertising in children's neighbourhoods using Google Street View

The advertising of unhealthy food and beverages forms an important component of obesogenic environments. Such marketing to children is a key health determinant because of its impact on dietary preference and food purchasing behaviour. The location of outdoor advertising is important in exploring obe...

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Veröffentlicht in:Geographical research 2019-02, Vol.57 (1), p.84-97
Hauptverfasser: Egli, Victoria, Zinn, Caryn, Mackay, Lisa, Donnellan, Niamh, Villanueva, Karen, Mavoa, Suzanne, Exeter, Daniel J., Vandevijvere, Stefanie, Smith, Melody
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container_end_page 97
container_issue 1
container_start_page 84
container_title Geographical research
container_volume 57
creator Egli, Victoria
Zinn, Caryn
Mackay, Lisa
Donnellan, Niamh
Villanueva, Karen
Mavoa, Suzanne
Exeter, Daniel J.
Vandevijvere, Stefanie
Smith, Melody
description The advertising of unhealthy food and beverages forms an important component of obesogenic environments. Such marketing to children is a key health determinant because of its impact on dietary preference and food purchasing behaviour. The location of outdoor advertising is important in exploring obesogenic environments and children's neighbourhoods. The aim of this study is to explore issues involved in the use of Google Street View to examine outdoor food and beverage advertising. The implications for using Google Street View in the context of neighbourhood built environment research and grass‐roots advocacy are discussed. The study was conducted within walkable distances from 19 primary and intermediate schools in Auckland, New Zealand, where “walkable” was defined as limited by 800 m road network boundaries, which are equivalent to school buffer boundaries. Google Street View allows for centrality of data collection, coding, and storage. However, challenges exist with the method because 727 (29.4%) of a total of 2,474 outdoor advertisements that were identified were not able to be categorised because images were unclear, not in English, blocked, or at angles where detail cannot be deciphered. Specific to outdoor advertising for food and beverages, the results presented here show that children are exposed to a significantly greater number of unhealthy advertising than other advertising, P=0.001, eta‐squared statistic (0.45) indicates a large effect size. Overall, the results show promise for the use of Google Street View in the study of obesogenic environments.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/1745-5871.12291
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However, challenges exist with the method because 727 (29.4%) of a total of 2,474 outdoor advertisements that were identified were not able to be categorised because images were unclear, not in English, blocked, or at angles where detail cannot be deciphered. Specific to outdoor advertising for food and beverages, the results presented here show that children are exposed to a significantly greater number of unhealthy advertising than other advertising, P=0.001, eta‐squared statistic (0.45) indicates a large effect size. 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source Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts
subjects Advertisements
Advertising
Advocacy
Beverages
Boundaries
Built environment
Children
Children & youth
Childrens health
Data collection
Diet
Drinks
Food
Food preferences
Google Street View
Grass roots movement
Healthy food
Marketing
Neighborhoods
New Zealand
obesogenic environments
Outdoor advertising
Schools
Storage
Urban areas
Urban environments
title Viewing obesogenic advertising in children's neighbourhoods using Google Street View
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