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EUCAM Newsletter January 2020 - Updates on alcohol marketing
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EUCAM collects, exchanges and promotes news and knowledge about the impact of
alcohol marketing and alcohol marketing regulation throughout Europe. Visit the website of EUCAM: www.eucam.info 

Frontiers in Psychology, 22 January 2020

Research has shown that young people post a lot of alcohol-related posts (i.e., alcoholposts) on social media and these posts have been shown to increase drinking behaviors. Because social influencers (i.e., individuals with the potential to influence large audiences on social media) may have a strong influence on young people, it is important to know whether and how often they post about alcohol. Furthermore, because by using influencers alcohol brands may have found a way to circumvent regulations that prohibit advertising for minors, it is important to understand whether alcohol brands are visible in influencers’ posts and whether influencers use disclosures (e.g., “#ad”) to notify viewers. In a content analysis of Instagram posts of 178 popular influencers, we investigated: how many and how often influencers post about alcohol, (2) what type of influencers post about alcohol, (3) what the characteristics of influencers’ alcoholposts are, and (4) to what extent these alcoholposts are commercialized (e.g., by showing brands and sponsorship disclosures). Results showed four main findings. (1) The majority of influencers (i.e., 63.5%) posted about alcohol recently. (2) Alcoholposts were positive, showed a social context, and were mostly posted by lifestyle influencers. (3) Although a fair amount of alcoholposts (19.5%) showed a clear alcohol brand, only a few of these posts disclosed this as an advertisement, and even fewer gave an educational slogan (i.e., “#no18noalcohol”). (4) Posts with sponsorship disclosures yielded fewer likes and comments than posts without such disclosures.

Authors: Hanneke Hendriks (photo), Danii Wilmsen, Wim van Dalen and Winifred A. Gebhardt.

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January 15, 2020, by

The alcohol advertising watchdog has warned brands to closely monitor their packaging and historical social media posts following a record number of breaches in the final quarter of 2019.

The Alcohol Beverages Advertising Code (ABAC) recorded 22 breaches of its standards, from 39 determinations, the highest quarterly figures in 21 years.

Most of the breaches related to social media marketing, with packaging that may appeal to minors and which could be confused with soft drinks among the complaints upheld.

ABAC said there was an “unusually” high number of breaches where ads suggested the consumption of alcohol was acceptable before or during activities.

In one social media post, for Pirate Life, a can of beer was pictured under water while the drinker was swimming with sharks (see picture).


Pirate Life, acquired by CUB in 2017, was responsible for seven of the breaches. Another breach, on an Instagram video, saw a mountain biker consume a beer and carry on riding.

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Isobel Bandurek ; World Cancer Research Fund
14 January 2020 | Healthy living
 

Isobel Bandurek, our Research Interpretation Manager, shares her findings on how we are subtly nudged to drink more alcohol and why it can be hard to give up drinking this January.

It’s January. It’s dark, rainy … but possibly also ‘dry’. If, like an estimated 4 million other Brits, you’ve embarked on Dry January this year, it might be because you want to reset your relationship with alcohol, get a bit healthier or save some money. But you might also be wondering around now why it’s been a bit of a challenge – it should be easy, right? Well, the world of alcohol has been changing under our noses.

Queen Anne and her egg cups

I read a really interesting article on the change in wine glass size over the last 400 years. Back in the early 1700s, when Queen Anne was on the throne, the average glass size used for wine was 66ml. That’s about one and a half egg cups. Over time, wine glasses have grown in size – culminating in the 450ml vessels available today! As you can imagine, larger glasses encourage more drinking.

There’s also evidence that subtle changes to the shape and thickness of the glass can be used by companies operating in the food and drink sector to manipulate our drinking habits. For example, it can be hard to estimate volume accurately in a particularly large and wide wine glass. While we might be able to choose our wine glasses more carefully at home, when you go out to a restaurant, the glass size is chosen for you – and likely optimised to encourage more drinking.

2019

Source: University of Stirling  Summary : Young people’s awareness of alcohol marketing — and their ownership of alcohol-branded merchandise — is associated with increased and higher-risk consumption, a landmark study has found.

Published in BMJ Open, the research — led by the University of Stirling and the Cancer Policy Research Centre at Cancer Research UK — revealed that 11 to 19-year-old current drinkers, who report high alcohol marketing awareness, are one-and-a-half-times more likely to be higher risk drinkers, compared to those who have low or medium awareness.

In young people who have never consumed alcohol, those who own alcohol-branded merchandise are twice as likely to be susceptible to drink in the next year, the research found.

Significantly, the paper reports that 82 per cent of young people recalled seeing at least one form of alcohol marketing in the month preceding the survey, with at least half estimated to have seen 32 or more instances — equating to one per day. Meanwhile, one fifth reported owning alcohol-branded merchandise.

The study — led by Dr Nathan Critchlow (see photo), of the University’s Institute of Social Marketing (ISM) — is the first to examine awareness of alcohol marketing and ownership of branded merchandise in a demographically representative sample of young people across the UK, including those both above and below the legal purchase age for alcohol.
 

Dr Critchlow said: “Alcohol marketing is more than advertising; it exists in many different forms — more commonly known as the marketing mix — and we found this was reflected in what young people recalled. More than a third of young people recalled seeing alcohol advertising through television, celebrity endorsement, and special offers in the week before they participated in the survey, while more than a fifth recalled seeing outdoors adverts or adverts on social media.

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 EUCAM aims to disseminate impact research on alcohol marketing and encourages the monitoring of alcohol marketing.

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European Centre for Monitoring Alcohol Marketing (EUCAM)
P.O. box 9769 | 3506 GT | Utrecht | The Netherlands

T: +31 (0)30 6565 041  | www.EUCAM.info; @EUCAM1

Visit www.EUCAM.INFO for all recent information about alcohol marketing

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Copyright © 2020 European Centre for Monitoring Alcohol Marketing, All rights reserved.


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