ABSTRACT
One proposed solution to address childhood obesity is to limit children’s exposure to advertising for sugar-sweetened beverages. Might persuasive appeals be able to channel anger toward the soda industry in order to promote support for marketing regulations and increase intentions to engage in activism around this issue? This study sought to answer this question by drawing on research in communication and psychology about the relationships between anger, persuasion, and activism-related outcomes. Participants (N = 551) were randomly assigned to read one of four messages about sugary drink marketing to kids, following a 2 (anger: high vs. low) × 2 (efficacy: high vs. low) design, or to a no-exposure control group. There was a main effect of the anger manipulation on policy support, which was driven by support for punitively oriented policies. Although no main effects were observed for activism intentions, mediation analyses indicated indirect effects of the anger and efficacy appeals on intentions by way of evoked anger and perceived efficacy, respectively. Contrary to expectations, messaging effects did not differ for pro-attitudinal and counter-attitudinal groups. Implications for public health advocacy and persuasion research are discussed.
Acknowledgments
I would like to think Jeff Niederdeppe, Sahara Byrne, Robin Nabi, Jon Schuldt, and Mike Shapiro for feedback on drafts of this manuscript.
SUPPLEMENTAL DATA
Supplemental data for this article can be accessed at here
Notes
1. It should be noted that none of the two-way interactions for T1 policy support × anger condition or T1 policy support × efficacy condition were significant for policy support, intentions, or counterarguing.
2. Evoked anger mediated the effect of the anger manipulation on support for punitive policies (IE = .45, SE = .08, 95% CI = .32, .62) but not support for non-punitive policies (IE = .08, SE = .05, 95% CI = −.01, .19).
3. Another series of post hoc, three-way ANOVAs using self-efficacy (α = .83) or response efficacy (α = .84) as independent variables (instead of the full efficacy index) revealed similar results.