Introduction
Sugar-sweetened beverage and caffeinated beverage consumption are associated with a variety of health issues among youth. Food and beverage marketing has been shown to affect youth’s preferences, purchases, and consumption of marketed products. Previous research suggests that outdoor food and beverage marketing differs by community demographics, with more advertisements in lower-income communities and near schools. The purpose of this study is to examine the density of sugar-sweetened and caffeinated beverage advertisements near schools by school type (middle vs. high school) and by school-level SES.
Methods
Data are from the Outdoor Measuring and Evaluating the Determinants and Influence of Advertising (MEDIA)study, which documented and described all outdoor food and beverage advertisements near 47 middle and high schools in 2012. Beverage advertisements were categorized as: sugar-sweetened/caffeinated, sugar-sweetened/non-caffeinated, non-sugar-sweetened/caffeinated, or non-sugar-sweetened/non-caffeinated. Schools were categorized by type (middle vs high) and by SES as determined by the percentage of students qualifying for free or reduced-price lunch. Bootstrapped non-parametric Mann-Whitney U tests compared the number of advertisements in each category by school type and school-level SES (higher vs lower).
Results
Compared to schools with higher SES, schools with lower SES had significantly more advertisements for sugar-sweetened/non-caffeinated beverages (Medianlow = 28.5 (IQR 17–69), vs Medianhigh = 10.5 (IQR 4–17) (p = 0.002)., sugar-sweetened non-caffeinated (Medianlow = 46 (IQR 16–99) vs Medianhigh = 13.5 (IQR 6–25), p = 0.002), -sugar-sweetened caffeinated (Medianlow = 12 (IQR 8–19) vs Medianhigh = 6 (IQR 2–8), p = 0.000), and non-sugar-sweetened non-caffeinated (Medianlow = 30 (IQR 13–65) vs Medianhigh = 14 (IQR 4–29), p = 0.045).There were no significant differences by school type.
Conclusion
This study adds to the literature demonstrating pervasive marketing of unhealthy products in lower-income communities. Disproportionate exposure to sugar-sweetened and caffeinated beverage advertisements in lower-income communities may contribute to the disparities in associated health outcomes by economic status.