Diet drinks may not
"save" you calories
From Sharita Forrest,
University of Illinois
A new study that examined the
dietary habits of more than 22,000 U.S. adults found that diet-beverage
consumers may compensate for the absence of calories in their drinks by noshing
on extra food that is loaded with sugar, sodium, fat and cholesterol.
University of
Illinois kinesiology
and community health professor Ruopeng An examined
10 years of data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey,
conducted by the National Center for Health Statistics, which asked
participants to recall everything they ate or drank over the course of two
nonconsecutive days.
An compared participants’ daily
calorie intakes, including their consumption of discretionary foods and five
types of beverages – diet or sugar-free drinks; sugar-sweetened beverages, such
as sodas and fruit drinks; coffee; tea; and alcohol.
More than 90 percent of the people
in the study consumed discretionary foods daily, averaging about 482 calories
from these products each day, An found.
Although previous research on
beverage preferences and consumption of discretionary foods focused on
between-meal snacking, An chose to look at the nutritional quality of the food
participants consumed rather than when it was eaten. His paper will appear in a
future issue of the Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics.
About 97 percent of the study
population consumed at least one of the five types of beverages daily, with
about 41 percent of respondents drinking beverages from at least two of the
categories. More than 25 percent of the participants consumed three or more
types of beverages daily.
Coffee was participants’ beverage
of choice, consumed by more than half – 53 percent – of the population,
followed by sugar-sweetened beverages (43 percent), tea (26 percent), alcohol
(22 percent) and diet beverages (21 percent).
Alcohol consumption was associated
with the largest increase in daily calorie intake (384 calories), followed by
sugar-sweetened beverages (226 calories), coffee (108 calories), diet beverages
(69 calories) and tea (64 calories).
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