Table 2.
Binary logistic regression for child purchase request and parental purchase (n 5764)
| Child ownership of happy meal or fast-food toys | Child ownership of branded merchandise with logos for unhealthy food products | Child request for unhealthy food with licenced characters | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AOR | CI (95 %) | AOR | CI (95 %) | AOR | CI (95 %) | |
| Number of locations of parental exposure | 1⋅100* | 1⋅069–1⋅132 | 1⋅136* | 1⋅106–1⋅166 | 1⋅206* | 1⋅175–1⋅239 |
| Country (Canada as reference) | ||||||
| Australia | 0⋅760* | 0⋅602–0⋅958 | 0⋅865 | 0⋅614–1⋅217 | 0⋅896 | 0⋅681–1⋅178 |
| United Kingdom | 0⋅864 | 0⋅687–1⋅086 | 0⋅979 | 0⋅714–1⋅344 | 1⋅084 | 0⋅835–1⋅408 |
| United States | 1⋅155 | 0⋅911–1⋅466 | 1⋅852* | 1⋅369–2⋅504 | 2⋅130* | 1⋅651–2⋅747 |
| Mexico | 1⋅249 | 1⋅001–1⋅558 | 1⋅587* | 1⋅184–2⋅127 | 3⋅171* | 2⋅500–4⋅022 |
AOR, adjusted odds ratio; CI, confidence interval.
P-value considered significant (P < 0⋅05) according to the Benjamini–Hochberg method; adjusted for the presence of children aged 5 years and under, 6–12 years, and 12–17 years, perceived income adequacy, and parental sex, age, ethnicity, and education.