Food for Thought

Main Content

Sugar-Sweetened Beverages: Extra Sugar, Extra Calories & Extra Weight

  • sugary-drinks.jpgPanel card - PDF
  • Babey SH, Jones M, Yu H, Goldstein H. Bubbling Over: Soda consumption and its links to obesity. UCLA Center for Health Policy Research and the California Center for Public Health Advocacy. September 2009.
  • Chen, l.; Appel, L.J.; Loria, C.; Lin, Ph.H.; et al. "Reduction in Consumption of Sugar-Sweetened Beverages is Associated with Weight Loss: The PREMIER Trial." American Journal of Clinical Nutrition; 2009 May; 89 (5): 1299-1306.
  • Johnson, R.K.; et al. "Dietary Sugars Intake and Cardiovascular Health: A Scientific Statement from the American Heart Association." Circulation. August 2009.
  • Malik, V.S.; Pan, A.; Willett, W.; and Hu, F. "Sugar-sweetened beverages and weight gain in children and adults: a systematic review and meta-analysis." American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. 2013.
  • "Relationship between consumption of sugar-sweetened drinks and childhood obesity: a prospective, observational analysis." Lancet, 2001. 357:505-508.
  • Schulze, M.; Manson, J.; Ludwig, D.; "Sugar-sweetened beverages, weight gain, and incidence of Type 2 Diabetes in young and middle-age women." Journal of the American Medical Association, 2004. 292(8)927-934.
  • Woodward-Lopez, G.; Kao, J.; and Ritchie, L. "To what extent have sweetened beverages contributed to the obesity epidemic?" Public Health Nutrition, 2011. 14(3):499-509.
  • Vartanian, L.R.; Schwartz, M.B.; Brownell, K.D.; "Effects of Soft Drink Consumption on Nutrition and Health: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis." American Journal of Public Health, 2007; 97 (4): 667-675.