Alcohol advertising: what makes it attractive to youth? J Health Commun . 2005; 10 ( 6 ):553–565Chen M, Grube JW, Bersamin M. Alcohol Advertising: What Makes It Attractive to Youth? J Health Commun. 2005;10(6):553–65.Chen, M. J., Grube, J. W., Bersanin, M., Waiters, E...
Teenagers and young adults who see more alcohol advertising are also likely to drink more,according to a study that makes the strongest link yet between alcohol advertisements and youth drinking. The findings from the United States challenge the claim by alcohol manufacturers that advertising does not...
Martin; (2) The effect of alcohol ads on youth 15-26 years old, by Leslie Snyder, Mark Hamilton, Fran Fleming-Milici, and Michael D. Slater; (3) A comparison of exposure to alcohol advertising and drinking behavior in elementary versus middle school children, by Phyllis L. Ellickson and ...
David Jernigan,of the Centre on Alcohol Marketing and Youth at Georgetown University,Washington D C. wrote in an editorial that the research cast doubt on the alcohol industry's central claims about advertising. "The fact that young people were more likely to drink more over time in environments...
Despite Facebook's troubling contribution to youth-oriented alcohol advertising and the connection between advertising, youth consumption, and harm, no systematic review of alcohol promotion on Facebook had previously been conducted. To fill this void, Marin Institute examined the prevalence of alcohol...
Advertising has a somewhat impression on the teens. 56% of people in grades 5-12 said advertising encourages them to drink. In SAMHSA's National Household Survey of ages 12-17 the results showed that 7.2 million teens drank at least once last year. 2.7 million drank once a month and 1 ...
Objective: A growing body of research suggests that exposure to alcohol advertising increases the risk of alcohol-related adverse health consequences among underage populations. The alcohol industry has voluntary advertising guidelines to restrict the placement of alcohol advertisements only to media in whi...
Underage drinking is a serious public health problem in the United States, and youth exposure to alcohol advertising has been indicated as a possible contributing factor. Although a number of studies have identified advertising content features that youth find appealing, a key limitation of this rese...
Numerous studies assessing the impact of alcohol marketing on youth drinking have been carried out over the past 25 years. Early econometric studies investigating the associations between total alcohol advertising spend and drinking behaviour did not find any effect (Hastings et al., 2005). However,...
Addiction scientists are calling for tighter regulation of alcohol advertising, as new research shows that self-regulation by the alcohol industry does not protect impressionable children and youth from exposure.