Day 065 - 09 Dec 94 - Page 04
1 factor in this. Of course, very young children, the
2 influence of parents is likely to be much greater.
3 18 months old, children are moving from weaning foods on to
4 family foods. I am not saying that at 18 months (and I do
5 not believe the report says that) that the influence of
6 advertising is necessarily at that age going to be the
7 greatest influence, direct influence, on a child because we
8 are specifically here talking about 18 months.
9
10 What I would like to add to that is that we also have to
11 look at where the parents may have been getting their ideas
12 about food and nutrition from. This particular study
13 showed that parents themselves were not particularly eating
14 a healthy diet.
15
16 I think if one were to go further in looking at different
17 influences, and this particular study did not seek to look
18 at all influences on the whole process, I use this
19 reference to look at the diets of children and why they may
20 be cause for concern. This was one example which showed
21 that children like many of their parents, young children
22 here, were eating what may be thought to be, rather, diets
23 that could be better from a nutritional point of view.
24
25 It was not used in this case to look at the relative value
26 of influences on children's diets.
27
28 Q. Do you perceive a difference, Ms. Dibb, between saying on
29 the one hand that advertising to children is a powerful or
30 the most powerful influence on their food choices, saying
31 that on the one hand, and saying on the other hand
32 advertising has an influence on anybody and, to some
33 extent, the choices which parents make for their children's
34 food may be influenced by advertising. Do you see a
35 difference between those two propositions?
36 A. Could you repeat that?
37
38 Q. Yes. Do you see a difference between saying advertising to
39 children has an influence on their food choices as powerful
40 as that of their parents, that is the first proposition,
41 and the second proposition which I ask whether you can
42 distinguish, is saying that advertising influences, to some
43 extent, everybody's choices, and it may be that in the
44 choices which the parent makes for his children's or her
45 children's food advertising has a role to play?
46 A. Certainly advertising, I believe, does have a role to
47 play in influencing both children directly and indirectly
48 through their parents.
49
50 MR. JUSTICE BELL: Mr. Rampton was asking if you saw a
51 difference or a distinction between the two?
52 A. Between saying that children are being directly
53 influenced and that children are being influenced through
54 their parents?
55
56 MR. RAMPTON: Yes.
57 A. I think they are all part of the same picture. After
58 all, that is what goes on in the world; influences interact
59 with each other and reinforce each other maybe. I think it
60 is all part of the greater picture.