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Article

Restricting the content of alcohol advertising and including text health warnings: A between-group online experiment with a non-probability adult sample in the United Kingdom

Alternative title Restricting the content of alcohol advertising

Details

Citation

Critchlow N, Moodie C & Gallopel-Morvan K (2024) Restricting the content of alcohol advertising and including text health warnings: A between-group online experiment with a non-probability adult sample in the United Kingdom [Restricting the content of alcohol advertising]. Alcohol: Clinical & Experimental Research. https://doi.org/10.1111/acer.15327

Abstract
Background: Statutory options for restricting alcohol advertising include limiting it to product-orientated information and requiring health warnings. We assess the impact of removing positive contextual factors from alcohol advertising and including a health warning among adults in the United Kingdom (UK). Methods: We conducted a 2 × 2 online between-group experiment with adults (18+) (n = 2421) recruited from a non-probability research panel in the United Kingdom. Participants were randomized to see an alcohol (vodka) advertisement (advert) which varied by context (no context vs. imagery depicting positive social interactions around alcohol) and message (multiple text health warning vs. “drink responsibly”). The multiple text health warning, based on recent legislation in Ireland, comprised three separate warnings (liver disease, cancers, drinking during pregnancy) and a web address for alcohol-related information and support. The “drink responsibly” control reflected the self-regulatory messages commonly used by alcohol companies. Participants rated the advert on 7-point scales for advert attractiveness, product appeal, trial intentions, perceived harm, and whether it made drinking alcohol seem enjoyable. Results: Removing the positive social context reduced positive advert and product reactions (difference in estimated marginal means [EMM]: ?1.57 [makes drinking alcohol seem enjoyable] to ?0.23 [intention to try]). Including the multiple text health warning also reduced positive advert and product reactions (difference in EMM: ?0.55 [advert attractiveness] to ?0.25 [intention to try]) and increased perceived product harm (difference in EMM: +0.25). There were no interactions between advert context and message for any outcome. Conclusions: Restricting content and including a multiple text health warning (compared to a “drink responsibly” message) may attenuate the persuasive impact of alcohol advertising and increase perceived product harm. Further research is needed to examine different degrees of content restrictions, alternative warning content and design, generalizability to different alcohol products and advert formats, and whether the impact of content controls varies among population subgroups.

Keywords
alcohol advertising; alcohol marketing; content controls; experimental research; health warnings

Journal
Alcohol, Clinical and Experimental Research: Volume 48, Issue 6

StatusPublished
Funders
Publication date30/06/2024
Publication date online24/05/2024
Date accepted by journal26/03/2024
URL
ISSN2993-7175
eISSN2993-7175

People (3)

Dr Nathan Critchlow

Dr Nathan Critchlow

Research Fellow, Institute for Social Marketing

Professor Karine Gallopel-Morvan

Professor Karine Gallopel-Morvan

Honorary Professor, Institute for Social Marketing

Professor Crawford Moodie

Professor Crawford Moodie

Professor, Institute for Social Marketing

Projects (1)

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