نتایج جستجو برای: sugar sweetened beverage taxes

تعداد نتایج: 65868  

2013
Jamie F Chriqui Frank J Chaloupka Lisa M Powell Shelby S Eidson

Obesity is a global problem. Sugar-sweetened beverages (SSB) are a leading contributor of added sugars in individual diets and thus to obesity. Governments have considered taxing SSBs to prevent obesity and generate revenue, but no 'one-size-fits-all' taxation approach exists. We describes three key considerations for governments interested in exploring beverage taxation: (i) what type of tax t...

2013
Janne C. de Ruyter Martijn B. Katan Lothar D. J. Kuijper Djin G. Liem Margreet R. Olthof

BACKGROUND Substituting sugar-free for sugar-sweetened beverages reduces weight gain. A possible explanation is that sugar-containing and sugar-free beverages cause the same degree of satiety. However, this has not been tested in long-term trials. METHODS We randomized 203 children aged 7-11 years to receive 250 mL per day of an artificially sweetened sugar-free beverage or a similarly lookin...

Journal: :Appetite 2014
Sarah E Hill Marjorie L Prokosch Amanda Morin Christopher D Rodeheffer

Consumers often turn to non-caloric sweeteners (NCS) as a means of promoting a healthy body weight. However, several studies have now linked their long-term use to increased weight gain, raising the question of whether these products produce unintended psychological, physiological, or behavioral changes that have implications for weight management goals. In the following, we present the results...

2014
Michael A. Fuchs Kaori Sato Donna Niedzwiecki Xing Ye Leonard B. Saltz Robert J. Mayer Rex B. Mowat Renaud Whittom Alexander Hantel Al Benson Daniel Atienza Michael Messino Hedy Kindler Alan Venook Shuji Ogino Kana Wu Walter C. Willett Edward L. Giovannucci Jeffrey A. Meyerhardt

BACKGROUND In colon cancer patients, obesity, sedentary lifestyle, and high dietary glycemic load have been associated with increased risk of cancer recurrence. High sugar-sweetened beverage intake has been associated with obesity, diabetes, and cardio-metabolic diseases, but the influence on colon cancer survival is unknown. METHODS We assessed the association between sugar-sweetened beverag...

Journal: :Journal of the American Dietetic Association 2011
Brenda M Davy A Hope Jahren Valisa E Hedrick Dana L Comber

A reliance on self-reported dietary intake measures is a common research limitation, thus the need for dietary biomarkers. Added-sugar intake may play a role in the development and progression of obesity and related comorbidities; common sweeteners include corn and sugar cane derivatives. These plants contain a high amount of ¹³C, a naturally occurring stable carbon isotope. Consumption of thes...

Journal: :The British journal of nutrition 2008
S Anne Moorhead M Barbara E Livingstone Adrian Dunne Robert W Welch

The consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages is associated with increased incidence of overweight and obesity, and a factor underlying this putative link could be the relatively low levels of satiety that may be induced by these beverages. Although many sugar-sweetened beverages are carbonated, little attention has been given to the potential effects of level of carbonation on satiety and subse...

نمودار تعداد نتایج جستجو در هر سال

با کلیک روی نمودار نتایج را به سال انتشار فیلتر کنید