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Title
A Review Of Food And Nutrition Commuication And Promotion In Ghana |
Full text
https://doi.org/10.18697/ajfand.107.21810; http://ugspace.ug.edu.gh/handle/123456789/38090 |
Date
2022 |
Author(s)
Parbey, P.; Aryeetey, R. |
Abstract
Research Article - Dietary perception, behavior, and nutritional status can all be influenced by exposure to
information. Behavior change communication that is appropriately designed and
implemented is critical for motivating optimal dietary behavior. On the other hand,
inadvertent or deliberate misinformation can drive unhealthy dietary behaviors. As part
of the process to develop food-based dietary guidelines (FBDGs) for Ghana, this rapid
evidence review examined the nature, extent, sources, and medium of food and
nutrition information dissemination and promotion in Ghana. PubMed, Cochrane,
Google Scholar, and Open Access Theses Dissertations (OATD) databases were
searched systematically using keywords to identify relevant peer-reviewed and grey
literature. The review included 31 documents, after excluding 1,302 documents for
ineligibility (based on irrelevant title, abstract, and duplicates). Limited reporting of
undernutrition was found in print and electronic media. Unhealthy foods, including
sugar-sweetened beverages, snacks, yogurt, instant noodles, candy/chocolate, and ice
cream were frequently advertised through various communication media. Children are
highly exposed to food advertisements, which target them. Promotional characters,
animation, billboards, and front-of-store displays; product-branded books, and toys are
common strategies for food marketing and advertisement in Ghana. The most
frequently reported sources of health and nutrition information were television, radio,
social media, health professionals, families, and friends. Children and adults
experienced changes in food preferences and choices as a result of exposure to food
advertised on television. The commonly used traditional media were radio and
television; printed newspaper use has declined tremendously in the past decade. Social
media use (particularly WhatsApp, Facebook, and YouTube) is highest in urban areas,
and is growing rapidly; young adults are the most active users of social media
platforms. Experts recommend regulation as a mitigation for nutrition
miscommunication and inaccurate promotion. The current review highlights the need
for regulation of food marketing, and advertisement to safeguard a healthy food
environment in Ghana. |
Subject(s)
advertisement; promotion; diet; regulation; social media; food; Ghana |
Language
en |
Publisher
ajfand |
Type of publication
Article |
Format
application/pdf |
Repository
Accra - University of Ghana
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Added to C-A: 2022-08-31;09:26:55 |
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