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News Review From Harvard Medical School -- Studies Link Sugary Drinks, Weight Gain
News Review From Harvard Medical School -- Studies Link Sugary Drinks, Weight Gain
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Three new studies strengthen links between sugar-sweetened drinks and excess weight. The New England Journal of Medicine published them online September 21. Two studies involved children. One included 224 overweight and obese teenagers. They were randomly divided into 2 groups. One group received water and diet drinks delivered to their homes for a year. They were urged to avoid sugar-sweetened drinks and got regular pep talks. The other group got no drinks or advice. After a year, teens who got the free drinks had gained less weight than those in the other group. But a year after the program ended the difference had disappeared. A second study involved younger children who drank sugar-sweetened beverages regularly. Researchers gave each child a canned drink daily. One group got sugar-sweetened drinks. For the other group, the drinks were calorie-free and artificially sweetened. After 18 months, the diet-drink group had gained less weight than the other group. The third study looked at data from three large health studies of adults. Those who had genes that increase obesity risk were twice as likely to become obese if they also consumed a lot of sugary drinks. USA Today wrote about the first and third studies.
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A Perspective From The Harvard Medical School
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News Review From Harvard Medical School

September 24, 2012


News Review From Harvard Medical School -- Studies Link Sugary Drinks, Weight Gain

Three new studies strengthen links between sugar-sweetened drinks and excess weight. The New England Journal of Medicine published them online September 21. Two studies involved children. One included 224 overweight and obese teenagers. They were randomly divided into 2 groups. One group received water and diet drinks delivered to their homes for a year. They were urged to avoid sugar-sweetened drinks and got regular pep talks. The other group got no drinks or advice. After a year, teens who got the free drinks had gained less weight than those in the other group. But a year after the program ended the difference had disappeared. A second study involved younger children who drank sugar-sweetened beverages regularly. Researchers gave each child a canned drink daily. One group got sugar-sweetened drinks. For the other group, the drinks were calorie-free and artificially sweetened. After 18 months, the diet-drink group had gained less weight than the other group. The third study looked at data from three large health studies of adults. Those who had genes that increase obesity risk were twice as likely to become obese if they also consumed a lot of sugary drinks. USA Today wrote about the first and third studies.


By Claire McCarthy, M.D.
Harvard Medical School


What Is the Doctor's Reaction?

Sugar-sweetened beverages can make you fat.

That is essentially the message of three studies released today in the New England Journal of Medicine:

Despite these study results, it's also very clear that sugar-sweetened drinks aren't the whole story when it comes to obesity. So getting rid of them would not be a quick fix for anything.

The studies also looked at people's body mass index (BMI). This is a number based on a calculation involving height and weight. BMI is commonly used to determine who is overweight.

What Changes Can I Make Now?

Whether you are overweight or not, it's best to give up sugar-sweetened drinks. And don't buy them for your children. They have no nutrition, and they add calories that nobody needs. It's very clear that sugar-sweetened drinks are fueling the obesity epidemic in a big way.

Our bodies were designed to eat our calories, not drink them. We can take in quite a few calories through drink and still feel hungry. If we ate the same number of calories, we'd feel full.

Ideally, children should drink only water and low-fat, unsweetened milk. Some studies suggest that artificially sweetened drinks, while lower in calories, can lead to overeating. They might fuel a sweet tooth. We do think that artificial sweeteners are safe, but we are probably better off without them.

Sports drinks are rarely necessary. They might make sense if you are going to be involved in a long, vigorous activity, such as a marathon or a day-long tournament. But for your average athletic competition or activity, water is fine. Even 100% juice, which is better than a sugar-sweetened drink, should be limited to once a day.

What Can I Expect Looking to the Future?

As I always say whenever I write about nutrition or obesity, what we can expect if we don't make some big changes is more obese children and adults. Two-thirds of U.S. adults and one-third of U.S. children are overweight or obese. This has huge implications, not just for all of those people, but for us as a country.

That's why we need to pay attention to these studies. Getting rid of sugar-sweetened drinks isn't the cure for obesity. But it would help. And we need to do anything and everything that would help.



Last updated September 24, 2012


   
obesity,bmi,diet,nutrition
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