Tufts researchers recently reported that while the
leading source of calories in the average American
diet used to be from white bread, that may have changed.
Now, according to preliminary research conducted by
scientists at the Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition
Research Center on Aging at Tufts University, Americans
are drinking these calories instead. The research
was presented in abstract form at the Experimental
Biology Conference in April of this year and a more
comprehensive paper is being developed.
Odilia Bermudez, PhD, MPH, studied the reported diets
of a large nationwide sample of American adults. Among
respondents to the 1999-2000 National Health and Nutrition
Examination Survey (NHANES), more than two thirds
reported drinking enough soda and/or sweet drinks
to provide them with a greater proportion of daily
calories than any other food. In addition, obesity
rates were higher among these sweet drink consumers.
Consumers of 100% orange juice and low fat milk, on
the other hand, tended to be less overweight, on average.
Bermudez, who is also an assistant professor at Tufts
University's Friedman School of Nutrition Science
and Policy, is hopeful that, "by helping to identify
the main sources of excess energy in the American
diet, this work may contribute to the development
of much-needed strategies to combat obesity in the
American public."
"These results are startling," she continued, "and
indicate that we need a much better understanding
of how the American diet has changed. Our paper will
look more closely at the issue of sweet drink consumption
and its relation to obesity factors among three of
the main ethnic groups included in the national surveys:
African Americans, Hispanics and non-Hispanic whites."