Calories from sugar-sweetened drinks deemed most harmful, review finds
16 May 2018 --- A group of scientists have agreed that sugar-sweetened beverages play a unique role in chronic health problems, elevating their calorie status to more harmful than calories from other foods and drinks. The conclusions come from a position paper, published in Obesity Review, compiled by a group of researchers. Also highlighted in the paper was the overall difficulty in conducting and interpreting nutritional research.
The essential task of researchers writing the paper was to deliberate the question: Are all calories equal with regards to effects on cardiometabolic disease and obesity? The paper provides an extensive review of the current science on diets that can lead to obesity, cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes.
“What's new is that this is an impressive group of scientists with vast experience in nutrition and metabolism agreeing with the conclusion that sugar-sweetened beverages increase cardiometabolic risk factors compared to equal amounts of starch,” says lead author Kimber Stanhope, a research Nutritional Biologist with the School of Veterinary Medicine at the University of California, Davis.
The paper's sugar-sweetened beverage consensus is particularly relevant in light of a recent legal battle over warning labels on soda, which hinged on the 9th Circuit Court's determination of whether soda and other sweetened beverages are uniquely harmful to human health or one source of calories among many.
Britain and Ireland have already brought in sugar taxes earlier this year as part of their anti-obesity policies.
Sugar substitute: Aspartame
Another point of consensus among researchers is the role of the sugar substitute aspartame. The authors agreed that aspartame does not promote weight gain in adults. Stanhope suggests that this might come as a surprise to most people.
“If you go on the internet and look up aspartame, the layperson would be convinced that aspartame is going to make them fat, but it's not,” said Stanhope. “The long and short of it is that no human studies on non-caloric sweeteners show weight gain.”
The authors also agreed that consumption of polyunsaturated fats, such as those found in some vegetable oils, seeds and nuts, lowers disease risk when compared with equal amounts of saturated fats. However, that conclusion comes with a caveat. Dairy foods such as cheese and yogurts, which can be high in saturated fats, have been associated with reduced cardiometabolic risk.
The paper reviews the significant challenges involved in conducting and interpreting nutrition research.
“We have a long way to go to get precise answers on a lot of different nutrition issues,” says Stanhope. “Nevertheless, we all agree that a healthy diet pattern consisting of minimally processed whole grains, fruit, vegetables, and healthy fats promotes health compared with the refined and palatable typical Western diet pattern.”
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