Minder frisdranken tegen overgewicht bij kinderen.*
Uit een kleine trial blijkt dat het beperken van (suikerhoudende) frisdranken een duidelijk effect heeft op het gewicht van kinderen. Het drinken van al een groot glas frisdrank per dag zorgt voor een gewichtstoename van wel 500 gram per maand. Door de hoeveelheid frisdranken sterk te verminderen vielen de geteste kinderen duidelijk af. (Suikerhoudende) frisdranken hebben geen enkele voedingswaarde en zorgen alleen voor gewichtstoename.
Reducing
Teens' Intake Of Sugary Drinks Has Beneficial Effect On Weight Loss
Children's
intake of sugar-sweetened drinks, “ sodas, sports drinks, "juice
drinks," iced teas, lemonades and punches has surged in recent decades,
in step with the rise in childhood obesity. Now, in the March issue of
Pediatrics, researchers from Children's Hospital Boston report that a novel
intervention to limit consumption of sugary drinks at home deliveries of
noncaloric beverages had a beneficial effect on weight loss.
The randomized, controlled trial, led by Cara Ebbeling, PhD, and David
Ludwig, MD, PhD, in the hospital's Division of Endocrinology, enrolled 103
children aged 13 to 18 through a Boston area high school. The teens were
offered a $100 mall gift certificate if they stuck with the six-month study,
and all did.
Half the teens, picked at random, received weekly deliveries of noncaloric
beverages of their own choosing bottled waters and artificially-sweetened
drinks. They were instructed to avoid sugar-sweetened beverages and advised
on how to choose noncaloric drinks outside the home. Monthly phone calls and
refrigerator magnets ("Think Before You Drink") provided
reminders. The remaining teens, serving as a control group, were asked to
continue their usual eating and drinking patterns.
At the end of six months, the group receiving beverage deliveries had an 82
percent reduction in consumption of sugary drinks, while intake in the
control group remained unchanged. The heavier the teen was initially, the
stronger the effect on body weight. Among the heaviest one-third of teens,
the beverage-delivery group had a marked decrease in body mass index (BMI),
while the control group had a slight increase a group-to-group difference of
almost 1 pound per month. Other factors affecting obesity, physical activity levels and television viewing did not change
in either group.
Ebbeling calculates that a single 12-oz sugar-sweetened beverage per day
translates to about 1 pound of weight gain over 3 to 4 weeks.
"Sugary beverages have no nutritional value and seem to make a huge
contribution to weight gain," she says.
Comprehensive weight-loss programs often do not have a substantial effect on
body weight, Ebbeling adds. "People often get overwhelmed by nutrition
advice and give up," she says. "We opted to study one simple,
potentially high-impact behavior, and made it easy for adolescents to
replace sugary drinks with noncaloric beverages."
Although the intervention targeted only the home environment, previous
research suggests that home is where adolescents get the majority of their
food and beverages.
"It should be relatively simple to translate this intervention into a
pragmatic public health approach," the authors comment. "For
example, schools could make noncaloric beverages available to students by
purchasing large quantities at low costs."
###
The study was supported by the National Institute of Diabetes
and Digestive and Kidney Diseases and the Charles H. Hood Foundation.
Ebbeling and Ludwig are now starting a larger study that will seek to enroll
240 overweight students at multiple schools in greater Boston.
Coinvestigators include Henry Feldman, PhD and Stavroula Osganian, MD, ScD,
MPH, of Children's Clinical Research Program and Virginia Chomitz, PhD, from
the Institute for Community Health in Cambridge, Mass.
Founded in 1869 as a 20-bed hospital for children, Children's Hospital
Boston today is the nation's leading pediatric medical center, the largest
provider of health care to Massachusetts children, and the primary pediatric
teaching hospital of Harvard Medical School. In addition to 347 pediatric
and adolescent inpatient beds and comprehensive outpatient programs,
Children's houses the world's largest research enterprise based at a
pediatric medical center, where its discoveries benefit both children and
adults. More than 500 scientists, including eight members of the National
Academy of Sciences, nine members of the Institute of Medicine and 10
members of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute comprise Children's research
community. For more information about the hospital visit: http://www.childrenshospital.org/
Contact: Andrea Duggan
andrea.duggan@childrens.harvard.edu
Children's
Hospital Boston ( Maart 2006)