Fifty Years of Fat: News Coverage of Trends that Predate Obesity Prevalence

Davis, Brennan and Brian Wansink (2015), “Fifty Years of Fat: News Coverage of Trends that Predate Obesity,” BMC Public Health, 15:629. doi:10.1186/s12889-015-1981-1

18 Pages Posted: 16 Jul 2015 Last revised: 28 Apr 2017

See all articles by Brennan Davis

Brennan Davis

California State Polytechnic University, San Luis Obispo - Orfalea College of Business

Brian Wansink

Retired - Cornell University

Date Written: July 14, 2015

Abstract

Background

Obesity prevalence has risen in fifty years. While people generally expect media mentions of health risks like obesity prevalence to follow health risk trends, food consumption trends may precede obesity prevalence trends. Therefore, this research investigates whether media mentions of food predate obesity prevalence.

Methods

Fifty years of non-advertising articles in the New York Times (and 17 years for the London Times) are coded for the mention of less healthy (5 salty and 5 sweet snacks) and healthy (5 fruits and 5 vegetables) food items by year and then associated with annual obesity prevalence in subsequent years. Time-series generalized linear models test whether food-related mentions predate or postdate obesity prevalence in each country.

Results

United States obesity prevalence is positively associated with New York Times mentions of sweet snacks (b = 55.2, CI = 42.4 to 68.1, p = .000) and negatively associated with mentions of fruits (b = -71.28, CI -91.5 to -51.1, p = .000) and vegetables (b = -13.6, CI = -17.5 to -9.6, p = .000). Similar results are found for the United Kingdom and The London Times. Importantly, the “obesity followed mentions” models are stronger than the “obesity preceded mentions” models.

Conclusions

It may be possible to estimate a nation's future obesity prevalence (e.g., three years from now) based on how frequently national media mention sweet snacks (positively related) and vegetables or fruits (negatively related) today. This may provide public health officials and epidemiologists with new tools to more quickly assess the effectiveness of current obesity interventions based on what is mentioned in the media today.

Keywords: obesity; mass media; public health; marketing analytics, epidemiology

Suggested Citation

Davis, Brennan and Wansink, Brian, Fifty Years of Fat: News Coverage of Trends that Predate Obesity Prevalence (July 14, 2015). Davis, Brennan and Brian Wansink (2015), “Fifty Years of Fat: News Coverage of Trends that Predate Obesity,” BMC Public Health, 15:629. doi:10.1186/s12889-015-1981-1 , Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2630711 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2630711

Brennan Davis

California State Polytechnic University, San Luis Obispo - Orfalea College of Business ( email )

San Luis Obispo, CA 93407
United States
8057561722 (Phone)

Brian Wansink (Contact Author)

Retired - Cornell University ( email )

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