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Choosing sugary drinks over fruit juice for toddlers linked to risk of adult obesity

04.12.24 | Swansea University

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Consuming sugar-sweetened drinks in the first few years of childhood can be linked to poor diet patterns that increase the risk of obesity in later life, according to a new study by the School of Psychology at Swansea University.

Published in the European Journal of Clinical Nutrition , the study tracked the influence of diet on 14,000 British children from birth to adulthood and is believed to be the longest of its kind ever reported.

Using the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children , the research team found:

The study also highlighted corresponding differences in food choices. Children who consumed pure apple juice often followed a diet with more fish, fruit, green vegetables, and salad, whereas those drinking cola ate more burgers, sausages, pizza, french fries, meat, chocolate, and sweets.

Additionally, the team discovered a link between sugar-sweetened drinks and social deprivation, with children from affluent backgrounds more likely to have access to pure fruit juice.

Lead researcher Professor David Benton said: “The early diet establishes a food pattern that influences, throughout life, whether weight increases. The important challenge is to ensure that a child develops a good dietary habit: one that offers less fat and sugar, although pure fruit juice, one of your five a day, adds vitamin C, potassium, folate, and plant polyphenols.”

Dr Hayley Young added: “Obesity is a serious health concern, one that increases the risk of many other conditions. Our study shows that the dietary causes of adult obesity begin in early childhood and that if we are to control it, more attention needs to be given to our diet in the first years of life.”

European Journal of Clinical Nutrition

10.1038/s41430-024-01430-y

Data/statistical analysis

People

Early exposure to sugar sweetened beverages or fruit juice differentially influences adult adiposity

15-Mar-2024

Competing interests DB has served on the scientific advisory board of the European Fruit Juice Association, although he was no longer a member when this study was carried out. HY has no conflict of interest to declare.

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Article Information

Contact Information

Ffion White
Swansea University
f.e.white@swansea.ac.uk

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How to Cite This Article

APA:
Swansea University. (2024, April 12). Choosing sugary drinks over fruit juice for toddlers linked to risk of adult obesity. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LPE05708/choosing-sugary-drinks-over-fruit-juice-for-toddlers-linked-to-risk-of-adult-obesity.html
MLA:
"Choosing sugary drinks over fruit juice for toddlers linked to risk of adult obesity." Brightsurf News, Apr. 12 2024, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LPE05708/choosing-sugary-drinks-over-fruit-juice-for-toddlers-linked-to-risk-of-adult-obesity.html.