The Standard (St. Catharines)

Are teens consuming too many sports drinks?

- MARI A. SCHAEFER Philly.com

The campaign by public health advocates against sugar-sweetened sodas may have had an unintended consequenc­e: teens are drinking more sugar-sweetened sports drinks.

Drinks shown in advertisem­ents being consumed by impossibly fit athletes and named for fruits like mango, kiwi, and blackberry are aggressive­ly marketed to teens. The packaging and ads make them look like a healthy alternativ­e to sugary sodas, widely blamed for contributi­ng to obesity, diabetes, tooth decay and other ills.

Now, researcher­s at Harvard University have found a small but significan­t increase in the weekly consumptio­n of high-carbohydra­te sports drinks among teens. The study, which appeared May 7 in the journal Pediatrics, analyzed national data from the 2010 National Youth Physical Activity and Nutrition Survey and the 2015 Youth Risk and Behavior Survey. The researcher­s focused on teens because they’re more likely than younger kids to buy their own beverages.

In 2015, more than 57 per cent of the more than 22,000 high school students surveyed reported having at least one sports drink in the prior week, up from 56 per cent in 2010.

Conversely, between 2007 and 2015, there has been a 7.6 per cent drop in the number of youths reporting they drank one soft drink in the prior week, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Youth Risk Behavior Surveillan­ce System.

The Harvard study also found that 31 per cent of teens consumed between one and three sports drinks in the previous week, and about 12 per cent reported having four to six such drinks.

Teens who played on one or more sports teams were likely to consume one or more sports drinks each day.

So were teens who watched more than two hours of television, which researcher­s said was a “worrisome reflection of the associatio­n between TV viewing, commercial advertisem­ents and obesity.”

Boys were more likely than girls to guzzle the drinks, while Hispanic and black youths consumed more sports drinks than white children, researcher­s found.

But experts in nutrition warn that the average child — certainly not one parked in front of a TV — doesn’t need a sports drink that is loaded with electrolyt­es and carbohydra­tes, flavours and sweeteners.

“The better option is water or unsweetene­d beverages,” said Nyree Dardarian, a licensed dietitian and director of the Center for Integrated Nutrition and Performanc­e at Drexel University. There is no purpose to consuming all the carbohydra­tes in sports drinks unless you are competing in a high-intensity game, not at a high school soccer or softball practice, she said.

A 20-ounce bottle of orange Gatorade has a hefty 34 grams of sugar, 36 grams of carbs and 140 calories. Consume two or more sports drinks each week and over a year it can translate into extra pounds, said Dardarian. “Don’t drink your calories,” she advised.

A more positive message would be to eat the calories. Water and an orange would provide 100 per cent of the recommende­d dietary allowance for vitamin C for kids ages 4 to 18, plus fibre, she said.

Healthier options for kids include flavouring water by squeezing fresh fruit into it, adding a splash of fruit juice, or drinking flavoured seltzers, she said. The same advice applies for adults.

 ?? DREAMSTIME ?? Researcher­s have found an increase in the weekly consumptio­n of high-carb sports drinks among teens.
DREAMSTIME Researcher­s have found an increase in the weekly consumptio­n of high-carb sports drinks among teens.

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