For parents wanting to reduce the negative influence of TV on
their children, the first step is normally to switch off the
television set. But a new study suggests that might not be
enough.
It turns out indirect media exposure, like having friends who watch
a lot of TV, might be even more damaging to a young person's body
image than simply watching it herself.
Researchers from Harvard Medical School's Department of Global
Health and Social Medicine examined the link between media
consumption and eating disorders among adolescent girls in
Fiji.
What they found was surprising. The study's subjects did not even
need to have a television at home to see raised risk levels of
eating disorder symptoms.
The biggest factor for eating disorders was how many of a subject's
friends and schoolmates had access to TV.
It appeared that changing attitudes within a group that had been exposed to television were a more powerful factor than actually watching the programs themselves.
In fact, higher peer media exposure were linked to a 60 percent increase in a girl's odds of having a high level of eating disorder symptoms, independently of her own viewing.
Social Networks
Lead author Anne Becker, vice chair of the Department of Global
Health and Social Medicine at Harvard Medical School, said this
was the first study to attempt to quantify the role of social
networks in spreading the negative consequences of media
consumption on eating disorders.
"Our findings suggest that social network exposure is not just a
minor influence on eating pathology here, but rather, is the
exposure of concern," she said.
Becker said parents concerned about limiting cultural exposure to
their children can’t rely only on getting rid of TV in the
house.
Becker hopes the paper will encourage debate about responsible programming and the regulation of media content to prevent children from secondhand exposure.
"Up until now, it has been very difficult to get people who produce media as entertainment to come to the table and think about how they might ensure that their products are not harmful to children," she said.
This is Becker's second study of media's impact in Fiji, which is an ideal location for broadcast media research because of the recent arrival of television, in the 1990s, and the significant regional variations in exposure to TV, the Internet and print media.
Some remote areas in the recent study still did not have electricity, cell phone reception, television or the Internet when the data were collected in 2007.
Her first study found a rise in eating disorder symptoms among adolescent girls following the introduction of broadcast television to the island nation in 1995.
What makes Fiji a particularly interesting case is that traditional culture prizes a robust body shape, in sharp contrast to the image presented by Western television shows such as "Beverly Hills 90210," "Seinfeld" and "Melrose Place," which were very popular in Fiji when television debuted there in the 1990s.
Girls would see actresses as role models, says Becker, and began noting how a slender body shape was often accompanied by success in those shows. This perception appears to have been one of the factors leading to a rise in eating pathology among the Fijian teenagers.
But until now, it was not known how much of this effect came from an individual's social network.
Nicholas Christakis, professor of medical sociology in the department of health care policy at Harvard Medical School, has studied the spread of health problems through social networks.
"It shouldn't be that surprising to us, even though it is intriguing, that the indirect effects of media are greater," Christakis said. "Most people aren't paying attention to the media, but they are paying attention to what their friends say about what's in the media. It's a kind of filtration process that takes place by virtue of our social networks."
Becker says that although the study focused on Fijian schoolgirls, remote from the US, it warrants concern and further investigation of the health impact on other populations.