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You may want to rethink about that parenting magazine you are reading as a recent study shows that most ads in these publications don\'t always illustrate safe practices.
You may want to rethink about that parenting magazine you are reading as a recent study shows that most ads in these publications don't always illustrate safe practices.
The study found a surprising number of advertisements appearing in the nation's top magazines for parents showed images or products that contradicted health and safety recommendations from the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP). Nearly 1 in 6 ads contained at least one offense.
In more than half of these cases (59 percent), the ads promoted messages that could put a child's life at risk, according to findings that will be presented at the 2015 AAP National Conference & Exhibition in Washington, DC.
For example, some of the ads displayed images of infants sleeping on their stomachs. This conflicts with the AAP's recommendation that babies be placed on their backs for sleep to decrease the risk of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS), which is responsible for more deaths during the first year of life than any other cause in the United States.
The study looked at all advertisements for children's products from the two parenting magazines with highest U.S. circulation between 2009 and 2014. It evaluated how often ads went against AAP recommendations in a variety of categories.
Researchers had expected to see a handful of contradictions in the safe sleeping category, as previous researchers had shown most pictures of sleeping infants in these magazines depicted unsafe positions, but "we were surprised at the sheer number and breadth of categories where we found offenses," said lead author Michael B. Pitt.
Examples included: Inappropriate use of medicines for unsafe age groups or medicines that have not been approved for use in children by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration; promotion of unsafe toys such as infant walkers and backyard trampolines; lack of helmets while riding bicycles or not wearing life vests on the water and ads with toddlers eating foods that the AAP has age-specific choking recommendations against.
Pitt said the findings were cause for concern because repeated exposure to messages in advertisements is shown to change people's behavior related to health decision-making.
"We suggest the editors consider basic screening of the content in their advertising to ensure the images and products comply with the recommendations of the American Academy of Pediatrics prior to publication," Pitt noted. (ANI)
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