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The Effects of Alcohol Advertising on Youth Drinking Over Time. Leslie Snyder University of Connecticut. How much alcohol advertising is out there?. TNS Media Intelligence/CMR. Most ad money was spent on TV. Spending by product type. Spending by parent company in 2003. Current study.
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The Effects of Alcohol Advertising on Youth Drinking Over Time Leslie Snyder University of Connecticut
How much alcohol advertising is out there? TNS Media Intelligence/CMR
Current study • Funded by National Institute of Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (R01AA11551). • Purpose is to look at the effects of alcohol ads on youth.
Methods • Computer-aided telephone survey of youth aged 15-26. • Sampled from 24 United States cities, representing 75% of the population, which lives in metropolitan areas above 957,000 in population. • Wave 1, N = 1872 May-July 1999 • Wave 2, N = 1173 Dec-Jan 2000 • Wave 3, N = 787 May-June, 2000 • Wave 4, N = 588 Dec-Jan, 2001 • Attrition higher among baseline drinkers; so conservative test. • Sample weighted by city population, gender, & respondent age
Key measures • Behavior: # drinks in the past month, computed from frequency of drinking, average quantity drunk per episode, & maximum drunk per episode. • Self-report ad exposure in the past month: 8 item index for exposure to beer and liquor ad exposure on TV, radio, magazines, and billboards. • Market-level advertising availability: sum of money spent on ads on TV, radio, billboards, & newspapers per market. Purchased industry data.
Are youth exposed to alcohol ads? • Markets had between 285 (Tulsa) & 13,170 (Chicago) ads in 1999 & 2000, with a mean of 4314 ads. Ad amounts were stable over time. • Youth reported exposure to 3 ads on average in past month.
How much do kids drink? • 43% of underage youth 15-20 had at least 1 drink in the past month at baseline. • Underage drinkers had an average of 28 drinks per month, and 4.3 drinks per drinking session. • 53% of youth 15-26 had at least 1 drink in the past month at baseline. • Drinkers had an average of 36 drinks per month, and 4.4 drinks per drinking session.
What is the relationship between alcohol advertising and drinking? • H1: Youth living in markets with more ads drink more than youth in markets with fewer ads. • H2: Youth exposed to more ads drink more than youth exposed to fewer ads. • H3: Youth exposed to more ads increase their drinking over time.
Analysis • Hierarchical linear modeling (HLM 5.04) • Form of mixed modeling, with random & fixed effects. • Accounts for clustered sample (markets). • Allows partitioning of variance – observation, individual levels. • Keeps all data on cases, including cases that drop out after baseline.
Model Alcohol use = intercept + time + ad exposure observation level + mean ad exposure individual level + market ad availability market level + market sales market level + prior alcohol useobservation level + control variables (Time, Gender, Age, Whether in high school or not, African-Americans, Hispanics, Live with their parents or not, # hours worked per week.)
H1: Youth living in markets with more alcohol ads drink more than youth in markets with fewer ads. • Market-level ad availability was positively related to alcohol use. • The relationship held when controlling for amount of alcohol sales in the market. • Results held for both underage youth 15-20 and youth 15-26.
H2: Youth exposed to more alcohol ads drink more than youth exposed to fewer ads. • Alcohol use increased when a youth had higher mean level of ad exposure across all waves. • Within-individual ad exposure was not statistically significant. • Results held for both underage youth 15-20 and youth 15-26.
Youth drinking amounts by ad exposure & market-level ad availability
Example case Number of drinks a 20 year old white male is predicted to have had in the past month
H3: Youth exposed to more alcohol ads increased their drinking over time. • Statistically controlled for prior alcohol use & prior ad exposure. • Individual-level ad exposure and market ad availability predicted changes in alcohol use.
Summary Youth drinking was greater than their peers and increased more over time when: • youth reported more alcohol ad exposure than their peers and • youth lived in markets with more ads.
Conclusions • The amount of local alcohol advertising in the media environment and amount of advertising recalled matters to youth alcohol use. • Underage youth displayed same pattern of effects as the entire age range.
Conclusions • The results address the reverse causality question – can a correlation between youth ad exposure and drinking be due entirely to drinkers noticing more ads? • No, • because using the objective measure of market ad availability we still find a relationship with drinking, i.e. youth alcohol drinkers tend to live in places with more ads. • and because increases in drinking over time are associated with higher levels of ad exposure.
Conclusions • The results extend research on alcohol ad bans by linking # ads in market with individual youth behavior. • The relationship between market-level ad availability & youth drinking was not due to market differences in alcohol sales.
Conclusions • Conservative test of advertising availability effects because it measures the “added value” over & above the effects of national ads.
Conclusions • Youth reporting greater amounts of long-term exposure to alcohol advertising drank more than youth who saw fewer ads, and were more likely to increase drinking over time. • Results are consistent with theories of cumulative effects of advertising. • For each person, the amount of alcohol consumption was not sensitive to short-term differences in alcohol advertising exposure.
Conclusions • Some argue that advertising is unrelated to youth drinking and at best causes brand switching. • If true, we would not have found positive relationships between alcohol advertising and changes over time in youth alcohol use.
Conclusion • If current educational efforts by industry groups were enough to negate any effects of alcohol advertising on youth drinking, we would have found null effects. • If alcohol ads only impact adults, we would not have found the effects of alcohol advertising on underage youth drinking. • Alcohol advertising is a contributing factor to youth drinking quantities over time.
Contact information: Dr. Leslie Snyder Dept. of Communication Sciences University of Connecticut Storrs, CT 06269-1085 USA 860 486-4383 (o) leslie.snyder @uconn.edu