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Home Science & Technology Science

40% sugar cut in fizzy drinks can prevent 300,000 diabetes cases

byCT Report
25/01/2016
in Science, Science & Technology
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ISLAMABAD: A study has revealed that cutting sugar in fizzy drinks by 40 per cent can prevent over 300,000 obesity-related Type 2 diabetes in next two decades.

An average reduction in energy intake of 38.4 kcal (calories) per day by the end of the fifth year will lead to an average body weight decrease of 1.20 kg in adults, leading to a reduction in overweight and obese adults by approximately 0.5 million and 1.0 million, respectively, researchers have found.

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This would, in turn, prevent 274,000-309,000 obesity-related Type 2 diabetes over the next two decades. If fruit juices were excluded from sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs), the corresponding reduction in energy intake and body weight would be 31.0 kcal/day and 0.96 kg, respectively.

“This would result in a 0.3 million cases reduction in overweight and a 0.8 million cases reduction in obesity, which would in turn prevent around 221,000-250,000 diabetes cases over two decades,” said the study published in The Lancet Diabetes and Endocrinology journal.

According to the authors, the proposed strategy could lead to a profound reduction in energy intake from sugar-sweetened beverages and could, therefore, lower the prevalence of overweight, obesity, and Type 2 diabetes in the long term. “The findings provide strong support for the implementation of the proposed strategy,” they added.

They conclude that “individuals should also reduce their consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages in the long term but this can be difficult because of the advertising power of industry”.

“Our proposed strategy provides an innovative and practical way to gradually reduce energy intake from sugar-sweetened beverages and its combination with other strategies, including a tax on sugar-sweetened beverages, would produce a more powerful effect,” they noted.

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