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Junk
Food One-Third of U.S. Diet
Junk foods such as sugary sodas
and chips make up nearly one-third of calories in the U.S. diet,
researchers said.
A study of 4,700 adults showed
that, despite the increased popularity of low-carbohydrate diets,
soft drinks and pastries pile on more calories in the daily diet
than anything else.
"What is really alarming is the
major contribution of 'empty calories' in the American diet,"
said Gladys Block, a professor of epidemiology and public health
nutrition at the University of California, Berkeley, who led the
study.
Writing in the June issue of the
Journal of Food Chemistry and Analysis, Bock and colleagues said
that sweets and desserts, soft drinks and alcoholic beverages
account for nearly 25 percent of all calories consumed by Americans.
Salty snacks and fruit-flavored
drinks add another five percent.
"We know people are eating a lot
of junk food, but to have almost one-third of Americans' calories
coming from those categories is a shocker. It's no wonder there's
an obesity epidemic in this country," Bock said in a statement.
Bock used data from a U.S. government
survey called the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey.
She analyzed the answers of 4,760 adults interviewed in 1999 and
2000.
They were asked to report all the
foods they ate in the previous 24 hours.
Sodas contributed 7.1 percent of
the total calories eaten. Sweets topped the list, followed by
hamburgers, pizza and potato chips.
"It's important to emphasize that
sweets, desserts, snacks and alcohol are contributing calories
without providing vitamins and minerals," said Block.
"In contrast, such healthy foods
as vegetables and fruit make up only 10 percent of the caloric
intake in the U.S. diet. A large proportion of Americans are undernourished
in terms of vitamins and minerals," Block added.
"You can actually be obese and
still be undernourished with regard to important nutrients. We
shouldn't be telling people to eat less -- we should be telling
people to eat differently."
Reference
Source 89
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