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Star Athletes Often Endorse Junk Food, Study Says

来源:WebMD Medical News
摘要:ByAmyNortonHealthDayReporterMONDAY,Oct。7(HealthDayNews)--Professionalathletesmaybeknownfortheirfitness,butthefoodstheyendorseareusuallylessthanhealthy,anewstudyfinds。ThestudyfoundthatfoodandbeveragespromotedbythelikesofPeytonM......

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By Amy Norton

HealthDay Reporter

MONDAY, Oct. 7 (HealthDay News) -- Professional athletes may be known for their fitness, but the foods they endorse are usually less than healthy, a new study finds.

The study found that food and beverages promoted by the likes of Peyton Manning and Serena Williams are most often high in calories and devoid of nutrients. Of 62 food products athletes endorsed in 2010, 79 percent fell into the junk food category. And nearly all athlete-promoted beverages got 100 percent of their calories from sugar.

Experts said the findings, reported online Oct. 7 and in the November print issue of Pediatrics, are not startling.

But they are concerning, in part because athletes are paragons of fitness, said Dr. Michael Rich, a pediatrician and director of the Center on Media and Child Health, in Boston.

"There's an implicit message that the athletes actually use these products, and that (the products) are healthy," said Rich, who did not work on the study.

Linking an athlete to a food or drink "could lend it a health halo," agreed Marie Bragg, the lead researcher on the study and a Ph.D. candidate at Yale University in New Haven, Conn.

The finding that athletes endorse nutritionally suspect foods is no surprise, according to Bragg. "I think everyone has the sense that this is what's happening, just based on what we see," she said.

But, she added, this study actually examined the nutritional content of athlete-endorsed foods, and looked at the marketing reach of those ads.

"You see them everywhere -- TV, newspapers, magazines, the Internet," Bragg said. And based on Nielsen data, her team found, teenagers see those TV ads more often than adults do.

That's troubling, Bragg said, because teenagers often idolize sports stars.

And, Rich added, "kids are much more likely to see TV ads than to read nutrition labels on products."

For the study, Bragg's team looked at data on athlete endorsements during 2010. Of 512 brands hawked by 100 athletes, 24 percent were for food and beverages -- including McDonald's, Burger King, Oreos, Pepsi, Mountain Dew and Red Bull.

LeBron James of the Miami Heat (National Basketball Association), Peyton Manning of the Denver Broncos (National Football League) and tennis star Serena Williams were the "highest contributors to the marketing of unhealthy foods," Bragg's team reported.

Perhaps not surprisingly, athletes most commonly promoted sports drinks like Gatorade and Powerade. But the researchers considered any drink that gets 100 percent of its calories from sugar as unhealthy -- and sports beverages fall into that category.

"Sports drinks are basically soda," Rich said. But consumers, particularly kids, may view them as health foods, he noted.

The American Beverage Association, which represents the industry, said its members have been careful to avoid targeting young children.

作者: 2013-10-8
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