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The Amazing Statistics and
Dangers of Soda Pop
Americans drink more soda pop than ever before:
These popular beverages account for more than a quarter of
all drinks consumed in the United States.
More than 15 billion gallons were sold in 2000.
That works out to at least one 12-ounce can per day for
every man, woman and child.
Kids are heavy consumers of soft drinks, according to the
U.S. Department of Agriculture, and they are guzzling soda
pop at unprecedented rates.
Carbonated soda pop provides more added sugar in a typical
2-year-old toddler's diet than cookies, candies and ice
cream combined.
Fifty-six percent of 8-year-olds down soft drinks daily, and
a third of teenage boys drink at least three cans of soda
pop per day.
Not only are soft drinks widely available everywhere, from
fast food restaurants to video stores, they're now sold in
60 percent of all public and private middle schools and high
schools nationwide, according to the National Soft Drink
Association. A few schools are even giving away soft drinks
to students who buy school lunches.
As soda pop becomes the beverage of choice among the
nation's young -- and as soda marketers focus on
brand-building among younger and younger consumers -- public
health officials, school boards, parents, consumer groups
and even the soft drink industry are faced with nagging
questions:
How healthful are these beverages, which provide a lot
calories, sugars and caffeine but no significant nutritional
value?
And what happens if you drink a lot of them at a very young
age?
Last week, representatives of the soft drink industry,
concerned that public opinion and public policy may turn
against them, will staged a three-day "fly-in" to lobby
Congress to maintain soft drinks sales in schools; and to
educate lawmakers on the "proper perspective" on soft drink
use.
The industry plans to counter a US Department of Agriculture
proposal, announced in January, that would require all foods
sold in schools to meet federal nutrition standards. That
would mean that snack foods and soft drinks would have to
meet the same standards as school lunches.
Nearly everyone by now has heard the litany on the presumed
health effects of soft drinks:
Obesity
Tooth decay
Caffeine dependence
Weakened bones
But does drinking soda pop really cause those things?
To help separate fact from fiction, the Health section
reviewed the latest scientific findings and asked an array
of experts on both sides of the debate to weigh in on the
topic. Be forewarned, however: Compared with the data
available on tobacco and even dietary fat, the scientific
evidence on soft drinks is less developed. The results can
be a lot like soft drinks themselves, both sweet and sticky.
Obesity
One very recent, independent, peer-reviewed study
demonstrates a strong link between soda consumption and
childhood obesity.
One previous industry-supported, unpublished study showed no
link. Explanations of the mechanism by which soda may lead
to obesity have not yet been proved, though the evidence for
them is strong.
Many people have long assumed that soda -- high in calories
and sugar, low in nutrients -- can make kids fat. But until
this month there was no solid, scientific evidence
demonstrating this.
Reporting in The Lancet, a British medical journal, a team
of Harvard researchers presented the first evidence linking
soft drink consumption to childhood obesity. They found that
12-year-olds who drank soft drinks regularly were more
likely to be overweight than those who didn't.
For each additional daily serving of sugar-sweetened soft
drink consumed during the nearly two-year study, the risk of
obesity increased 1.6 times.
Obesity experts called the Harvard findings important and
praised the study for being prospective. In other words, the
Harvard researchers spent 19 months following the children,
rather than capturing a snapshot of data from just one day.
It's considered statistically more valuable to conduct a
study over a long period of time.
Researchers found that schoolchildren who drank soft drinks
consumed almost 200 more calories per day than their
counterparts who didn't down soft drinks. That finding helps
support the notion that we don't compensate well for
calories in liquid form.
Tooth Decay
Here's one health effect that even the soft drink industry
admits, grudgingly, has merit. In a carefully worded
statement, the NSDA says that "there's no scientific
evidence that consumption of sugars per se has any negative
effect other than dental caries." But the association also
correctly notes that soft drinks aren't the sole cause of
tooth decay.
In fact, a lot of sugary foods, from fruit juices to candy
and even raisins and other dried fruit, have what dentists
refer to as "cariogenic properties," which is to say they
can cause tooth decay.
Okay, so how many more cavities are soft drink consumers
likely to get compared with people who don't drink soda?
This is where it gets complicated.
A federally funded study of nearly 3,200 Americans 9 to 29
years old conducted between 1971 and 1974 showed a direct
link between tooth decay and soft drinks. Numerous other
studies have shown the same link throughout the world, from
Sweden to Iraq.
But sugar isn't the only ingredient in soft drinks that
causes tooth problems. The acids in soda pop are also
notorious for etching tooth enamel in ways that can lead to
cavities. "Acid begins to dissolve tooth enamel in only 20
minutes," notes the Ohio Dental Association in a release
issued earlier this month.
Caffeine Dependence
The stimulant properties and dependence potential of
caffeine in soda are well documented, as are their effects
on children.
Ever tried going without your usual cup of java on the
weekend? If so, you may have experienced a splitting
headache, a slight rise in blood pressure, irritability and
maybe even some stomach problems.
These well-documented symptoms describe the typical
withdrawal process suffered by about half of regular
caffeine consumers who go without their usual dose.
The soft drink industry agrees that caffeine causes the same
effects in children as adults, but officials also note that
there is wide variation in how people respond to caffeine.
The simple solution, the industry says, is to choose a soda
pop that is caffeine-free. All big soda makers offer
products with either low or no caffeine.
That may be a good idea, though it raises the question of
whether soda machines in schools should be permitted to
offer caffeinated beverages or at least be obligated to
offer a significant proportion of caffeine-free products.
It also raises the question of how one determines a
product's caffeine content. Nutrition labels are not
required to divulge that information. If a beverage contains
caffeine, it must be included in the ingredient list, but
there's no way to tell how much a beverage has, and there's
little logic or predictability to the way caffeine is
deployed throughout a product line.
Okay, so most enlightened consumers already know that colas
contain a fair amount of caffeine. It turns out to be 35 to
38 milligrams per 12-ounce can, or roughly 28 percent of the
amount found in an 8-ounce cup of coffee. But few know that
diet colas -- usually chosen by those who are trying to
dodge calories and/or sugar -- often pack a lot more
caffeine.
A 12-ounce can of Diet Coke, for example, has about 42
milligrams of caffeine -- seven more than the same amount of
Coke Classic. A can of Pepsi One has about 56 milligrams of
caffeine -- 18 milligrams more than both regular Pepsi and
Diet Pepsi.
Even harder to figure out is the caffeine distribution in
other flavors of soda pop. Many brands of root beer contain
no caffeine. An exception is Barq's, made by the Coca-Cola
Co., which has has 23 milligrams per 12-ounce can. Sprite,
7-Up and ginger ale are caffeine-free. But Mountain Dew, the
curiously named Mello Yellow, Sun Drop Regular, Jolt and
diet as well as regular Sunkist orange soda all pack
caffeine.
Caffeine occurs naturally in kola nuts, an ingredient of
cola soft drinks. But why is this drug, which is known to
create physical dependence, added to other soft drinks?
The industry line is that small amounts are added for taste,
not for the drug's power to sustain demand for the products
that contain it. Caffeine's bitter taste, they say, enhances
other flavors. "It has been a part of almost every cola --
and pepper-type beverage -- since they were first formulated
more than 100 years ago," according to the National Soft
Drink Association.
But recent blind taste tests conducted by Roland Griffiths
at Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions in Baltimore found
that only 8 percent of regular soft drink consumers could
identify the difference between regular and caffeine-free
soft drinks.
The study included only subjects who reported that they
drank soft drinks mainly for their caffeine content. In
other words, more than 90 percent of the self-diagnosed
caffeine cravers in this small sample could not detect the
presence of caffeine.
That's why the great popularity of caffeinated soft drinks
is driven not so much by subtle taste effects as by the
mood-altering and physical dependence of caffeine that
drives the daily self-administration.
And the unknown could be especially troublesome for the
developing brains of children and adolescents. Logic
dictates that when you are dependent on a drug, you are
really upsetting the normal balances of neurochemistry in
the brain. The fact that kids have withdrawal signs and
symptoms when the caffeine is stopped is a good indication
that something has been profoundly disturbed in the brain.
Exactly where that leads is anybody's guess -- which is to
say there is little good research on the effects of caffeine
on kids' developing brains.
Bone Weakening
Animal studies demonstrate that phosphorus, a common
ingredient in soda, can deplete bones of calcium.
And two recent human studies suggest that girls who drink
more soda are more prone to broken bones. The industry
denies that soda plays a role in bone weakening.
Animal studies -- mostly involving rats -- point to clear
and consistent bone loss with the use of cola beverages. But
as scientists like to point out, humans and rats are not
exactly the same.
Even so, there's been concern among the research community,
public health officials and government agencies over the
high phosphorus content in the US diet. Phosphorus -- which
occurs naturally in some foods and is used as an additive in
many others -- appears to weaken bones by promoting the loss
of calcium. With less calcium available, the bones become
more porous and prone to fracture.
The soft drink industry argues that the phosphoric acid in
soda pop contributes only about 2 percent of the phosphorus
in the typical US diet, with a 12-ounce can of soda pop
averaging about 30 milligrams.
There's growing concern that even a few cans of soda today
can be damaging when they are consumed during the peak
bone-building years of childhood and adolescence. A 1996
study published in the Journal of Nutrition by the FDA's
Office of Special Nutritionals noted that a pattern of high
phosphorus/low calcium consumption, common in the American
diet, is not conducive to optimizing peak bone mass in young
women.
A 1994 Harvard study of bone fractures in teenage athletes
found a strong association between cola beverage consumption
and bone fractures in 14-year-old girls. The girls who drank
cola were about five times more likely to suffer bone
fractures than girls who didn't consume soda pop.
Besides, to many researchers, the combination of rising
obesity and bone weakening has the potential to
synergistically undermine future health. Adolescents and
kids don't think long-term. But what happens when these
soft-drinking people become young or middle-aged adults and
they have osteoporosis, sedentary living and obesity?
By that time, switching to water, milk or fruit juice may be
too little, too late.
Washington Post February 27, 2001; Page HE10
This article is an older one, but the information bears
repeating. I see many overweight children in my practice and
am surprised at the about of sugar and sodas that some of
them are taking into their diets at such a young age. My
recommendations for liquids for kids starts with water. For
a 50 pound child they should be taking in about a quart of
water, not counting other liquids like juice or milk. The
amount of sugar in sodas are of great concern and contribute
significantly to frequent colds, bronchitis and a generally
depressed immune system. Additionally, the sugar contributes
to ADD/ADHD and related hyperactive or behavioral disorders.
Reducing your child's (as well as your own sugar intake) can
significantly decrease immune system dysfunctions, concerns
about osteoporosis and blood sugar imbalances.
Recommended liquid drinks include: WATER, herbal teas, green
tea, goat's milk, sparkling mineral waters, diluted fruit
juices (by 50%).