Latest News

Study offers dozens of reasons to cut sugar


 

FROM THE BMJ

A new compilation of nearly all research to date on the health impacts of sugar offers dozens of reasons to cut back.

Researchers from China and the United States rounded up 8,601 scientific studies on sugar and combined them to evaluate its impact on 83 health outcomes. The studies accounted for decades of research on the topic, stretching back to the beginning of the largest electronic databases for scientific papers.

The result is a list that cites the world’s most common health problems like heart disease, diabetes, obesity, high blood pressure, heart attack, high cholesterol, cancer, and depression. The findings were published in the BMJ. Researchers looked at studies that evaluated the impacts of consuming free sugars, which means any food that contains processed or naturally occurring sugars like table sugar, honey, or maple syrup. Sugar found in whole fruits and vegetables and in milk is not free sugar.

U.S. dietary guidelines recommend getting no more than 10% of daily calories from added sugars. For a typical 2,000-calorie-per-day diet, that equals no more than 200 calories, or about 12 teaspoons. The CDC reports that the average person consumes 17 teaspoons per day, with the largest sources being sugar-sweetened beverages, desserts, and snacks. (For context: one 12-ounce can of soda contains the equivalent of 9 teaspoons of sugar, according to beverage maker Coca-Cola.)

The new analysis also found links between sugary beverage consumption and other diet and lifestyle characteristics that may contribute to health problems.

“People who consumed sugar-sweetened beverages more frequently were likely to ingest more total and saturated fat, carbohydrate, and sodium, and less fruit, fiber, dairy products, and whole grain foods,” the authors wrote. “This dietary pattern was also associated with more frequent smoking and drinking, lower physical activity levels, and more time spent watching television. Therefore, the role of these confounding factors should be taken into consideration when explaining the association between sugar consumption and burden of disease.”

Recommendations for limiting sugar consumption are in place worldwide, the authors noted. They concluded that more needs to be done given the known health dangers of sugar.

“To change sugar consumption patterns, especially for children and adolescents, a combination of widespread public health education and policies worldwide is urgently needed,” they said.

A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.

Recommended Reading

Treat together: Tackle heart disease and obesity simultaneously
MDedge Internal Medicine
Factors linked with increased VTE risk in COVID outpatients
MDedge Internal Medicine
High caffeine levels may lower body fat, type 2 diabetes risks
MDedge Internal Medicine
TikTok’s fave weight loss drugs: Link to thyroid cancer?
MDedge Internal Medicine
Ozempic: The latest weight loss craze and how over-prescribing is harming patients
MDedge Internal Medicine
Mediterranean diet linked to 24% reduction in CVD risk in women
MDedge Internal Medicine
What’s the ‘secret sauce’ to help patients move more?
MDedge Internal Medicine
Should GI own the obesity field?
MDedge Internal Medicine
What happens when newer weight loss meds are stopped?
MDedge Internal Medicine
New antiobesity drugs will benefit many. Is that bad?
MDedge Internal Medicine