Mandatory Alcohol Health Warning Labels: Limited Visibility Despite High Regulatory Compliance in Mexico.

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Abstract

Introduction This study evaluated the physical characteristics and visibility of mandatory alcohol health warning labels on commercial beverage containers to assess their communicative effectiveness. Methods A descriptive observational study analyzed a sample of alcoholic beverage containers. Physical attributes—including warning location, font size, pictogram dimensions, and color contrast—were measured using standardized geometric approximations. Results While 97.4% of containers included warnings, only 11.5% placed them on the front label. Visibility was low: pictograms occupied less than 1% of the total label area, and font sizes averaged just 3.6 mm. Furthermore, only 19.2% adhered to officially approved color schemes, with most relying on low-contrast backgrounds. Discussion Although producers technically comply with mandatory regulations, their design choices structurally minimize warning salience. To restore public health impact, regulations must be urgently updated to mandate front-of-package placement, proportional sizing, and standardized high-contrast formats.

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