Nutritional content of foods advertised during the television programs children watch most

scientific article published on 01 September 2005

Nutritional content of foods advertised during the television programs children watch most is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P356DOI10.2105/AJPH.2004.048058
P932PMC publication ID1449399
P698PubMed publication ID16118368

P2093author name stringKristen Harrison
Amy L Marske
P2860cites workFood Advertising and Marketing Directed at Children and Adolescents in the USQ24563204
Food and nutrition in Canadian "prime time" television commercialsQ30420931
Association between child and adolescent television viewing and adult health: a longitudinal birth cohort studyQ34649695
Obesity: responding to the global epidemicQ34713693
The scientific basis of recent US guidance on sugars intakeQ35548910
Changes in childhood food consumption patterns: a cause for concern in light of increasing body weightsQ35605219
Do we fatten our children at the television set? Obesity and television viewing in children and adolescents.Q41484259
Health messages on television commercialsQ41633621
Sugar and cardiovascular disease: A statement for healthcare professionals from the Committee on Nutrition of the Council on Nutrition, Physical Activity, and Metabolism of the American Heart AssociationQ44075655
Food commercials during television soap operas: What is the nutrition message?Q44264538
Television's influence on children's diet and physical activityQ45151113
Advertised foods on children's television.Q46003779
Form and content: looking at visual features of televisionQ47600450
Children and TV advertising: nowhere to run, nowhere to hideQ48670690
Food advertisements during children's Saturday morning television programming: are they consistent with dietary recommendations?Q48830751
Effect of television advertisements for foods on food consumption in children.Q52092337
The prime time diet: a content analysis of eating behavior and food messages in television program content and commercialsQ68794633
The development of children's eating habits: the role of television commercialsQ70587877
Children's food purchase requestsQ72324736
Reducing children's television viewing to prevent obesity: a randomized controlled trialQ73145215
Old and new scales for the assessment of body imageQ73962619
Is "fat free" good for me? A panel study of television viewing and children's nutritional knowledge and reasoningQ81414515
P433issue9
P304page(s)1568-1574
P577publication date2005-09-01
P1433published inAmerican Journal of Public HealthQ4744266
P1476titleNutritional content of foods advertised during the television programs children watch most
P478volume95