A new study finds 15-second anti-junk food ads can reduce junk food cravings and unhealthy food intentions more effectively than longer ads.
News-Medical.Net on MSN
Short health ads reduce junk food cravings
A new Edith Cowan University (ECU) study has found advertisements that encourage healthy choices can reduce cravings and ...
News Medical on MSN
Short anti-junk food ads cut adult cravings
By Dr. Liji Thomas, MD A single junk food ad may not sway adults, but the right 15-second health message can. Researchers reveal how ad length and framing shape cravings differently for normal-weight ...
A new Edith Cowan University (ECU) study has found advertisements that encourage healthy choices can reduce cravings and intentions to consume unhealthy foods, and in some cases a 15-second message ...
A pending court complaint alleges bias after the regulator voted to block radio advertisements about the dangers of sugar.
As Americans recover from a barrage of Super Bowl food coupled with ads suggesting we eat even more — made light of in a funny and self-aware Uber Eats campaign starring Bradley Cooper and Matthew ...
For the poorest shoppers, access to healthy food is scarce. Affected areas are caught in a vicious circle of reduced choice ...
Gravity Lab on MSN
How I climb hard (for me)
Criminals dumped 1,200 tons of waste on my land. The £500k clean-up will bankrupt me Brits are eating equivalent of 22 packets of crisps in salt every day ...
With more products — from probiotic sodas to gut-healthy sea moss gel — being sold in recent years to promote new health tips, the question at hand is if they ...
A new study from Edith Cowan University (ECU) in Australia suggests that very short health advertisements could help people resist junk food cravings and make healthier choices. Surprisingly, the ...
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