Healthy Living Tips

Sugary Drinks Raise Diabetes Risk More Than Sweet Foods

Sugary Drinks Raise Diabetes Risk More Than Sweet Foods

If you drink sugar in the form of sodas, fruit juices, or energy drinks, you may raise your risk of type 2 diabetes more than you do with sweet foods, a new large meta-analysis found.

“The findings highlight why drinking your sugar is more problematic for health than eating it,” says the lead author, Karen Della Corte, a doctor of natural sciences and an associate professor of nutritional science at Brigham Young University in Salt Lake City.

A Daily Soda Raised Type 2 Diabetes Risk by 25 Percent

Dr. Della Corte and her team analyzed 29 long-term studies involving more than 500,000 healthy adults from around the world, including the United States, Europe, Asia, Australia, and Latin America. All the included studies tracked total sugar intake and intake of different types of sugar, including sucrose and fructose.

The researchers collected their data using surveys that asked how often participants ate or drank certain foods and beverages and in what amounts. The scientists then calculated how many grams of sugar were in those items.

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