A teen panel working with the Boston Public Health Commission has determined that their songs are among the top 10 with "unhealthy relationship ingredients".
The commission yesterday released its list based on a "nutrition label" rating popular songs on healthy relationship themes.
The Sound Relationships Nutrition Label was developed by 14 teens after they attended a seven-week commission-sponsored institute on healthy relationship promotion and teen dating violence prevention. During the seven-week programme, teens were also taught to evaluate music based on themes of power, control, equality and gender roles.
The teens then developed their list after analysing songs from Billboard's Hot 100 chart.
Mario's Break Up featuring Gucci Man and Sean Garrett and Jamie Foxx's Blame It, featuring T-Pain topped the list for the most unhealthy relationship songs of 2009. Lady Gaga's Bad Romance and Pitbull's Hotel Room Service were also listed.
Among the teen panel's top 10 songs with healthy themes: Miss Independent by Ne-Yo and Meet Me Halfway by the Black Eyed Peas.
Shaquilla Terry, 15, of Boston, a teen panel member, said it was important for listeners to go beyond the songs' beats and listen to the lyrics.
The commission said its programme aimed to teach teens how to evaluate popular media, and help parents talk to teens about healthy relationships. Commission officials also said the label invited consumers to become song lyric nutritionists by helping them identify positive and negative messages about relationships in songs.
"We aren't telling people what they should or should not be listening to," said Barbara Ferrer, the commission's executive director. "We are giving them a tool that will help them make an informed choice about what they put in their bodies."
Jack Perricone, chairman of the songwriting department at the Berklee College of Music in Boston, said pop songs generally allowed listeners to get away from the bad news of the day.
But he said pop music, by its very nature, was very repetitive, and sometimes if songs had negative messages, those repetitive messages could get inside teens' heads.