Article

Newspaper framing of food and beverage corporations’ sponsorship of sport: a content analysis

Details

Citation

Carters-White LE, Patterson C, Nimegeer A, Hilton S & Chambers S (2022) Newspaper framing of food and beverage corporations’ sponsorship of sport: a content analysis. BMC Public Health, 22. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-022-14031-w

Abstract
Background Unhealthy diets are a leading contributor to obesity, disability and death worldwide. One factor cited as contributing to rises in obesity rates is the pervasive and ubiquitous marketing of unhealthy foods and beverages (F&Bs) across a variety of mediums, such as sport sponsorship at both professional and amateur levels. Despite increased academic attention on the detrimental impacts of sport sponsorship within the obesogenic environment, this has not been matched by legislative action. One explanation may be the way that F&B corporations’ sport sponsorship is framed within policy debates. Framing is the deliberate ways in which (often contested) issues are presented in communication. This paper examines how sport sponsorship by F&B corporations is framed through media reports. Methods This study employed a mixed methods content and framing analysis. First, we conducted a quantitative newsprint content analysis (n = 234). This then informed and directed a thematic framing analysis of a sub-set of articles (n = 54) that specifically associated sport sponsorship by F&B corporations with obesity and childhood obesity. Results The findings suggest that two competing frames are evident within newspaper coverage: 1) public health and 2) industry. The public health frame rejects the sponsorship of sport by High in Fat Sugar and Salt (HFSS) product corporations in particular, calling for such sponsorship to be restricted or banned. The industry frame characterises sponsorship of sport as a form of corporate social responsibility, positioning industry as good moral actors and part of the solution to childhood and adult obesity. These frames are evident across other Unhealthy Commodity Industries (UCIs) policy debates. However, the prominence of industry actors within the sample is potentially indicative of their discursive power within this space, particularly with their emphasis on the financial maintenance of sport as well as encouraging physical activity, contributing to the lack of regulatory development of sport sponsorship by F&B corporations. Conclusions The findings of this study are particularly useful for public health organisations who seek regulatory change, as it may provide further insight into countering industry framing practices, raising the salience of regulation of sport sponsorship and thus increasing the likelihood of regulatory development that seeks to improve population health.

Keywords
Marketing; Food; Framing; Obesity; Sport sponsorship

Journal
BMC Public Health: Volume 22

StatusPublished
FundersMedical Research Council, Medical Research Council, Medical Research Council, Medical Research Council, Medical Research Council, UK Research and Innovation, Chief Scientist Office, Chief Scientist Office, Chief Scientist Office and Chief Scientist Office
Publication date30/09/2022
Publication date online30/09/2022
Date accepted by journal16/08/2022
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/36294
PublisherSpringer Science and Business Media LLC
eISSN1471-2458

People (1)

Dr Lauren Carters-White

Dr Lauren Carters-White

Lecturer in Public Health, Health Sciences Stirling