- UHRA Home
- Browsing by Author
Browsing by Author "Petticrew, Mark"
Now showing items 1-7 of 7
-
Changes in household food and drink purchases following restrictions on the advertisement of high fat, salt, and sugar products across the Transport for London network: A controlled interrupted time series analysis
Yau, Amy; Berger, Nicolas; Law, Cherry; Cornelsen, Laura; Greener, Robert; Adams, Jean; Boyland, Emma J.; Burgoine, Thomas; de Vocht, Frank; Egan, Matt; Er, Vanessa; Lake, Amelia A.; Lock, Karen; Mytton, Oliver; Petticrew, Mark; Thompson, Claire; White, Martin; Cummins, Steven (2022-02-17)Background: Restricting the advertisement of products with high fat, salt, and sugar (HFSS) content has been recommended as a policy tool to improve diet and tackle obesity, but the impact on HFSS purchasing is unknown. ... -
Escaping the Red Queen: Health as a corporate food marketing strategy
Cuevas, Soledad; Patel, Nishali; Thompson, Claire; Petticrew, Mark; Cummins, Steven; Smith, Richard; Cornelsen, Laura (2021-12-01)Public health advocates highlight the role of corporate actors and food marketing in shaping diets and health. This study analyses insider-oriented communications in food industry magazines in the UK to analyse actions and ... -
The health impact of free bus travel for young people in London : protocol for an observational study
Wilkinson, Paul; Edwards, Phil; Steinbach, Rebecca; Petticrew, Mark; Goodman, Anna; Jones, Alasdair John Howard; Roberts, Helen; Kelly, Charlotte; Nellthorpe, John; Green, Judith (London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, 2011-02)The extension, in September 2005, of free bus and tram travel in London to people 12-16 years of age and, in September 2006, to people under 18 years is likely to have had a range of impacts with implications for public ... -
How pharmaceutical and diagnostic stakeholders construct policy solutions to a public health ‘crisis’: an analysis of submissions to a United Kingdom House of Commons inquiry into antimicrobial resistance
Glover, Rebecca; Petticrew, Mark; Mays, Nicholas; Thompson, Claire (2022-01-24)Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is often characterised as a ‘crisis’, requiring action by public, private, and third-sector stakeholders to achieve strategic change. Crisis narratives are powerful and may be co-opted to ... -
Media representations of opposition to the ‘junk food advertising ban’ on the Transport for London (TfL) network: A thematic content analysis of UK news and trade press
Thompson, Claire; Clary, Christelle; Er, Vanessa; Adams, Jean; Boyland, Emma; Burgoine, Thomas; Cornelsen, Laura; de Vocht, Frank; Egan, Matt; Lake, Amelia A.; Lock, Karen; Mytton, Oliver; Petticrew, Mark; White, Martin; Yau, Amy; Cummins, Steven (2021-05-27)Background Advertising of less healthy foods and drinks is hypothesised to be associated with obesity in adults and children. In February 2019, Transport for London implemented restrictions on advertisements for foods and ... -
Public Health Interventions : Transport: OP35 The Health Impacts of Free Bus Travel for Young People in London
Edwards, Phil; Steinbach, Rebecca; Green, Judith; Petticrew, Mark; Wilkinson, Paul; Goodman, Anna; Jones, Alasdair; Roberts, Helen; Kelly, Charlotte; Nellthorp, John (2012-09)Interventions in transport systems have potentially far-reaching impacts on public health, but can be challenging to evaluate. In 2005, young people in London gained access to free bus travel; an intervention that has a ... -
Sociodemographic differences in self-reported exposure to high fat, salt and sugar food and drink advertising: a cross-sectional analysis of 2019 UK panel data
Yau, Amy; Adams, Jean; Boyland, Emma; Burgoine, Thomas; Cornelsen, Laura; de Vocht, Frank; Egan, Matt; Er, Vanessa; Lake, Amelia; Lock, Karen; Mytton, Oliver; Petticrew, Mark; Thompson, Claire; White, Martin; Cummins, Steven (2021-04-07)Objectives: To explore sociodemographic differences in exposure to advertising for foods and drinks high in fat, salt and sugar (HFSS) and whether exposure is associated with body mass index (BMI). Design: Cross-sectional ...