New study finds spike in sugary drink consumption among California adolescents
Although the study does not directly examine the causes for the sugary spike among teens, Dr. Harold Goldstein, executive director of the California Center for Public Health Advocacy, suggests one clear reason.
"As parents learn more about the harm from consuming sugary drinks, they are limiting how much their children drink," he said. "Teens, however, are more independent, making them an ideal target for beverage companies that spend hundreds of millions of dollars marketing sugary drinks to them, including deceptively healthy-sounding beverages like sports drinks and vitamin water. We may not be able to protect teens everywhere, but we should at least close the loophole in state law that allows companies to sell sugary sports drinks on middle and high school campuses."
Mirroring the overall youth picture, consumption dropped across ethnic groups for young children (2- to 11-year olds) but rose significantly for adolescent Latinos, Asians and African-Americans. Among African-American adolescents, 74 percent reported drinking at least one sugary beverage a day, a 14 percent rise from 2005–07. Latino adolescents trailed closely behind, at 73 percent.
The most dramatic growth in consumption, 31 percent, was reported among Asian adolescents, who climbed from one of the lowest levels among ethnic groups, 48 percent, to 63 percent reporting drinking at least one sugary beverage a day.
Comparing the 2005–07 reporting cycle to 2011–12, the statewide figures for all youth combined show an impressive 11 percent drop in consumption, with 41 percent drinking a sugary beverage a day. Nine counties, however, had more than half of their youth drinking at least one sugary beverage a day, with King (60 percent) and Fresno (58 percent) counties showing the highest levels. Lake County had the largest percent-change increase (36 percent), while Ventura County showed the greatest decline (37 percent).
"Soda and other sugary drinks contribute half a billion empty calories a day to California's costly childhood obesity crisis," said Dr. Robert Ross, president and CEO of The California Endowment, which funded the study. "We have to redouble our efforts to protect our children, especially adolescents and children of color, from the unbridled marketing of high-calorie drinks that is drowning our kids in sugar."
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