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Americans Are 'Sickeningly Sweet'
Newswise, March 19, 2011 — MELROSE PARK,
Ill. – Americans may like their drinks
'sickeningly sweet' but a new labeling
initiative may discourage us from pouring on
the unnecessary calories, said Jessica Bartfield, MD, medical weight-loss
specialist at Gottlieb Memorial Hospital.
As of February, the front labels of packaged
beverages now include the total number of
calories in containers of 20 ounces or less.
“Liquid caloric consumption can be quite a
significant contribution to weight gain so
this is a tremendous effort to educate the
public,” said Dr. Bartfield, who is part of
the Loyola University Health System campus
physician-led team of exercise
physiologists, nutritionists and
psychologists who work together to change
the behaviors of those significantly
overweight.
“Beverage containers traditionally ‘hid’ the
nutritional content at the back in a small
square with small print and cleverly listed
just the calorie content per serving,”
Bartfield said.
“Unbeknownst to those who are happily
guzzling their favorite cola or fruit drink,
most packaged beverages contain multiple
servings, and most Americans fail to do the
math on the total calorie count.”
Dr. Bartfield’s top three “sickeningly
sweet” statistics include:
1 – Just A Spoonful of Sugar - “The average
American consumes 22.5 teaspoons of added
sugar daily, half of which comes from
regular soda and fruit drinks, according to
the National Health and Nutrition
Examination Survey (1999-2004).”
2 – Sugar On Top – “10 percent of overweight
adults consume 450 calories of sugar
sweetened beverages per day, which is three
times that of an average American. Cutting
450 calories per day would lead to about a 1
pound per week weight loss, close to 50
pounds in one year.”
3 - Babies and Beverages – “A study from the
American Journal of Clinical Nutrition found
that reduction in sugar-sweetened beverages
(regular soda, fruit drinks and fruit punch)
had a significant effect on weight change at
6 months and 18 months, even more of an
impact than solid- calorie reduction.”
Message In a Bottle
35 year-old Chicagoan, Aaron Villarreal
regularly drank about 12 cans of cola every
day before joining the Gottlieb Medical
Weight Loss Program when his weight spilled
over at 350 pounds. "I was stunned when the
nutritionist poured white sugar in a
measuring cup to show me how much sugar I
was drinking in just one day," he said.
Villarreal cut the cola from his diet and
lost 5 pounds in one week. "Seeing that one
small change make such a dramatic difference
encouraged me to improve my diet in other
ways and to add exercise."
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