Scientific News Health care Problems of superfluous weight CALORIC SWEETENER USE GROWS WORLDWIDE; SOFT DRINKS ARE CHIEF CULPRIT, STUDY SHOWS.
CALORIC SWEETENER USE GROWS
WORLDWIDE; SOFT DRINKS ARE CHIEF CULPRIT, STUDY SHOWS
Use of caloric sweeteners, including sugar, has
grown markedly around the world over the past 40 years, according to a new
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill study.
In the United States, UNC scientists found
increasing consumption of beverages, including soft drinks and sugared fruit
drinks, was a major contributor to the burgeoning use of such sweeteners, which
nutritionists believe contribute to unhealthy obesity. Obesity boosts the risk
of heart disease, stroke, diabetes and other illnesses.
A report on the study appears in the November
issue of Obesity Research, a professional journal published by the North
American Association for the Study of Obesity. Authors are Dr. Barry Popkin,
professor of nutrition at the UNC schools of public health and medicine and a
fellow at the Carolina Population Center, and Samara Joy Nielsen, a nutrition
doctoral student.
"Over the past several years, a number of
studies have emerged that indicated how soft drink and fruit drink intake are
adversely linked with adolescent and adult weight gain in the United States and
Europe," Popkin said. "Our new study shows that the large increase in
added sugar is not restricted to these few very high-income countries but is a
worldwide phenomenon."
Also, until now, no food-related research has
shown specifically which foods are responsible for the large increases in added
sugar in the United States, he said.
"This study clearly documents for this
country that the increase in added sugar intake between 1977 and 1996 is caused
mainly by soft drinks and fruit drinks," Popkin said. "These
calorically sweetened beverages account for 66 calories out of the total per
capita caloric increase of 83 calories over this period, or close to 80 percent
of the increase in caloric intake from these sweeteners."
Nielsen and Popkin analyzed food data from 103
countries in 1962 and 127 countries in 2000, along with information about
urbanization and gross national income per capita. They also evaluated three
nationally representative U.S. Department of Agriculture surveys from 1977 to
1978, 1988 to 1991 and from 1992 to 1996 plus 1998 and looked how specific foods
contributed to growth in caloric sweetener intake. The average diet worldwide
increased by 74 calories a day, they found. Urbanization and income growth
contributed to 82 percent of the change. Between 1962 and 2000, the caloric
intake of sugar increased considerably more for lower- and middle-income
countries than for the highest-income countries.
"We also found that U.S. data showed an 83
calorie-per-day increase in caloric sweeteners consumed, a 22 percent jump in
the proportion of energy people got from these sweeteners," he said.
Nielsen and Popkin used the term "caloric
sweeteners" rather than added sugar because of the wide range of non-sugar
products now in use. One major example is high fructose corn syrup since
manufacturers add that rather than sugar to essentially all non-diet soft
drinks. Other sweeteners include maple products, caramel, artificial and natural
honey, maltose, glucose, dextrose and lactose.
"When the results of this study are coupled
with earlier studies, we can clearly see the pronounced shift in the world's
diet toward increased consumption of caloric sweeteners and away from
higher-fiber foods," the two wrote. "Thus, we are increasingly
consuming foods that provide energy but few other nutrients. Many scholars
assert that the reduction in milk consumption in the United States is linked
with the increase in intake of these calorically sweetened beverages."
Because of limited research, they said, the
implications of these dietary shifts on human health are unclear, and there is
still little understanding of replacement issues.
"It is clear, however, that consuming
excessive soft drinks or other high-sugar, low-nutrient foods will either add
calories or reduce nutrient intakes," Popkin and Nielsen wrote.
###
UNC News Services
Note: Popkin can be reached at 919-966-1732
or popkin@unc.edu,
Nielsen at samara@email.unc.edu.
Photo urls:
UNC School of Public Health contact: Lisa Katz,
919-966-7467
News Services contacts: David Williamson, 962-8596 and Karen Moon, 962-8595
The source of the given news and copyrights
belong to the University
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Publishing date: December 2, 2003
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