date:Dec 20, 2018
e study was associated with a 23 per cent higher likelihood of consuming sugary cereals. The combination of seeing the ads in the past week and at any time during the study period was tied to a 37 per cent higher likelihood children would eat the cereals.
The study can't prove whether the ads caused children to eat more sugary cereals, and it also did not examine how eating these cereals might impact children's health.
It is always difficult to evaluate the long-term effect of eating such cere