Sp11 HE325 Sugar & Soda
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Transcript Sp11 HE325 Sugar & Soda
Sugar
Sugars in food: AKA
Sucrose/sucralose
Table sugar, raw sugar,
turbinado sugar
Granulated cane sugar
Confectioner’s or powdered
sugar
Brown sugar
Invert sugar
Maple syrup
Polydextrose
Maltose
Maltodextrin
Molasses
Honey
Date sugar
Corn sweeteners
Corn syrup/HFCS
Fruit sugar (fructose)
Levulose
Fruit juice concentrate
Concentrated fruit juice
sweetener
Glucose
dextrose
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KVsgXP
t564Q&feature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EEbRxT
OyGf0
http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/OnCall/story?
id=4439943&page=1
High Fructose Corn Syrup
What is it?
Sweetener
made from corn
Metabolized in body similar to sugar?
FDA:
“Generally recognized as safe.”
Still controversial
Does it promote obesity?
Enhances flavor, softens texture & protects
freshness
Being renamed “Corn Sugar”
Artificial Sweeteners
The good & the bad.
Not metabolized the same way as sugar
Saves calories
But…
People
Real
may end up consuming more
sugar packet = 1 teaspoon = 16 calories
Artificial Sweeteners
Saccharin:
AKA:
Sweet & Low
One of the first substitutes approved by FDA
Aspartame:
AKA:
Nutrasweet or Equal
Approved by FDA in 1981
Stevia:
South
American shrub
Artificial Sweeteners continued
Sucralose:
AKA:
Splenda
600 times sweeter than sugar
Approved by FDA in 1998
Neotame:
7,000
times sweeter than sugar
FDA preliminary reports “safe”
Activity
So.. How much sugar is actually in some
common products?
Conversion: 4 grams = 1 teaspoon
Sodas
New York City Campaign
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O8g3e2
2ycIw
Sodas are the #1 source of added sugar in
the American diet!
(Jacobson, 2005; cspinet.org)
Soda & Calories
In General:
12
oz Pepsi – 150 calories
32
oz Pepsi – 400 calories
64
oz Pepsi – 800 calories
http://www.bing.com/images/search?q=soda&view=detail&id=7EE0C53857D87A5ECAE95301D2FA6705F2EAF2A1&first=1&FORM=IDFRIR
Soda & Obesity – connection?
Harvard Study:
Obesity
increases significantly with each daily
serving of sugar-sweetened soft drink.
Soft drinks currently are the leading source of
added sugar in the daily diet.
“It
is not uncommon for teenagers to receive
500 to 1000 calories per day from sugarsweetened drinks.” (David Ludwig, coauthor)
(Gortmaker, S., & Ludwig, D., (2001) Harvard School of Public Health)
Soda & Obesity continued
Overall, it is easy to over-consume
calories.
Soda & HFCS
Are diet sodas healthier?
Soda & Bones
Girls who are active:
5x
more likely to have bone fractures with
soda consumption.
Theory
of why:
Phosphoric acid may affect calcium metabolism
and bone mass.
(Wyshak, G., (2000), Harvard School of Public Health)
To Tax or Not to Tax?
Would taxing soft drinks help?
Pros …
Thoughts?