نتایج جستجو برای: sugar sweetened beverages
تعداد نتایج: 55476 فیلتر نتایج به سال:
BACKGROUND Several prospective studies have been conducted to examine the relationship between fruit juice intake and risk of incident type 2 diabetes, but results have been mixed. In the present study, we aimed to estimate the association between fruit juice intake and risk of type 2 diabetes. METHODS PubMed and Embase databases were searched up to December 2013. All prospective cohort studi...
The growing evidence on the association between consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages, obesity and other chronic diseases has highlighted the need to implement policy actions that go beyond programs exclusively focused on individual responsibility. In order to protect their commercial goals in Latin America, the sugar-sweetened beverage industry practices intense lobbying at high government ...
Sugar-sweetened beverages are widely believed to be contributing to the growing prevalence of overweight and obesity around the world. One of the channels used by industry to encourage greater consumption and preferences for soft drinks is schools. But governments around the world are taking action to limit the availability of soft drinks in schools. More than 30 national and subnational govern...
In response to the increase in children's weight in recent decades, many states, school districts, and schools in the United States have limited or eliminated the sale of sweetened beverages at school. These policies are promoted for their potential to reduce childhood overweight and obesity, but their effectiveness has not been evaluated. Using a large nationally representative longitudinal da...
Potential Health Risks From Beverages Containing Fructose Found in Sugar or High-Fructose Corn Syrup
F ructose is a sweet tasting sugar that is found naturally in fruits and some vegetables and has been part of the human diet—in modest amounts—for eons. The increasing consumption of sugar has dramatically increased our exposure to fructose (1). Sugar consumption has risen more than 40-fold since the Declaration of Independence was signed 250 years ago, andmore than 40% of the added sugars in o...
Rising obesity is a threat to public health, and taxing sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs) in order to reduce consumption and thus caloric intake could be a viable policy response. But raising the price of SSB calories will raise the quantity demanded of relatively cheaper calories, and net effect on obesity is unclear. I review the evidence on shifting calorie demand and discuss the viability of...
In this issue of the British Journal of Nutrition, Libuda et al. (1) describe their findings from the Dortmund Nutritional and Anthropometric Longitudinally Designed (DONALD) study on the relationship between sugar-sweetened beverages as well as fruit juice intake and changes in relative body weight over a 5-year period in 119 boys and 116 girls of average age 12 years at study commencement. Th...
In light of research linking sugar-sweetened beverage consumption to obesity, theUSDepartment of Agriculture, theAmericanAcademyofPediatrics, andotherorganizations have formulated recommendations on healthy beverages. These guidelines consistently recommend limiting consumption of all calorie-containing liquids, except reduced-fatmilk,ofwhichpeople inmost agegroupsareencouragedtoconsume3cupsdai...
1. Jou J, Techakehakij W. International application of sugar-sweetened be rage (SSB) taxation in obesity reduction: factors that may influe policy effectiveness in country-specific contexts. Health Policy. 2012;1 83–90. 2. MAGRAMA. Datos de consumo alimentario en España 2011. Madrid: Ministe de Agricultura, Alimentación y Medio Ambiente; 2012. 3. Wang YC, Coxson P, Shen YM, et al. A penny-per-o...
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