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Study Shows Children's Consumption of Sugar-Sweetened Beverages on the Rise

Comments by J. C. Spencer

A new study links increase in children�s sugar consumption to child obesity epidemic. Significant sugar increase the last ten years gives rise for concern. Contrast this picture with a diabetic who reported his sugar load was lowered by drinking sugar water sweetened with the healthful sugar trehalose. Two main things seem to be happening when a child starts consuming trehalose by putting it on his or her cereal and in beverages. (1) It reduces the harmful sugar intake of the child and (2) surprisingly, it reduces the craving for sweets.

Sugar Sweetened Beverage

Now, for the report on the study.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Study Shows Children's Consumption of
Sugar-Sweetened Beverages on the Rise

Findings Suggest Beverages May Have Contributed to the Childhood Obesity Epidemic

A recent study published in the journal Pediatrics and led by researchers at Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health found that sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs) are an increasingly large part of children and teens' diets. Teens who consume SSBs, which include sodas, fruit drinks and punches, and sports drinks, drink an average of 356 calories per day, a significant increase from 10 years earlier. The findings suggest that reducing empty caloric intake by limiting these drinks may be a key strategy for promoting healthy eating and preventing excess weight gain.

Soda is the most common of the sugar-sweetened beverages that constitute an increasingly large component of children's diets.

Comparing data from two time periods, 1988 to 1994 and 1999 to 2004, the study showed that over-consumption of sugary beverages is widespread, with 84 percent of teens consuming SSBs on a typical day. An adolescent male who consumes the average amount of SSBs per day (356 calories) would need to jog for an hour or walk for more than three hours to burn off these excess calories. The study also showed that the number of SSB calories consumed by children ages 2 to 5 and 6 to 11 increased from the previous decade. In particular, the study shows that children ages 6 to 11 consumed 20 percent more calories from sugar-sweetened beverages in 1999 to 2004 compared with the 1988 to 1994 period. The study also noted a more rapid increase in SSB calorie consumption among black and Mexican youths in the U.S.

While another recently released study reported that obesity rates may be leveling off after surging for more than two decades, the authors caution that the pace at which young people are becoming overweight remains alarmingly high, with approximately one of every three children and teens overweight and 16 percent reported as obese in the U.S. While the apparent plateau is promising, the researchers emphasize that childhood obesity rates remain more than triple the rates recorded in the 1960s and 1970s.

Growing evidence indicates that sugar-sweetened beverage consumption in children and teens may have contributed to these rising obesity rates in the United States. A 2006 Pediatrics study published by the same authors indicates that there is an energy gap contributing to the obesity epidemic. This energy gap - or the imbalance between the calories children take in each day and the calories they expend to support normal growth, physical activity, and body function - is about 110 to 165 excess calories per day. The latest Pediatrics study on sugar-sweetened beverages supports limiting intake of calories from sugary beverages to promote optimal energy balance.

"These findings highlight an alarming trend in sugary beverage consumption and should be a major concern for parents and policy-makers worried about the childhood obesity epidemic," says Y. Claire Wang, MD, ScD, assistant professor of health policy and management at Columbia's Mailman School of Public Health, and lead author of the study. "Mounting evidence suggests that the excessive consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages not only contributes to obesity but also promotes energy imbalance, further supporting the potential benefit of limiting these drinks."

Not surprisingly, the most common sugar-sweetened beverage was soda (55 percent of sugar-sweetened beverage calories), followed by a wide variety of fruit punches and fruit drinks. Together these accounted for 92 percent of sugar-sweetened beverages consumed by children and youth. The fastest growing category was sports drinks, increasing threefold among adolescents during the study period.

"Parents can be easily misled by the labels on fruit punch and sports drink bottles because they make these sugar-sweetened beverages seem essential for good health, when in fact they are nothing more than different forms of sugar water," notes Steven Gortmaker, professor of the practice of health sociology at the Harvard School of Public Health and co-author on the study. Sara Bleich, assistant professor of health policy and management at Johns Hopkins School of Public Health, is also a co-author of the study.

The study also shows that children are consuming these beverages in a variety of locations - homes, schools, fast food establishments and other types of restaurants. Most of the sugar-sweetened beverage consumption (55 to 70 percent) occurs at home, whereas 7 to 15 percent of consumption occurs in schools.

"The findings confirm that children are not getting all the beverages from just one place," Dr. Wang points out. "The amount of 'empty calories' that children and adolescents consume each day is very disconcerting. Parents, school administrators, policy-makers and leaders in the restaurant and beverage industry can all play an important role in reducing sugar-sweetened beverage consumption."

The study received funding from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.

http://www.columbia.edu/cu/news/08/06/ssb.html

June 3, 2008

Last Updated ( Jun 16, 2008 at 12:47 PM )