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  #1   ^
Old Tue, Sep-29-20, 03:54
Demi's Avatar
Demi Demi is offline
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Default New Limits Urged on Americans’ Sugar Consumption Amid Rising Obesity Concerns

New Limits Urged on Americans’ Sugar Consumption Amid Rising Obesity Concerns

Americans should get no more than 6% of their daily calories from added sugar, a federal committee recommends, down from the current 10% guideline


https://www.wsj.com/articles/new-li...rns-11601334000

Quote:
A federal committee’s recommendation that Americans should limit their consumption of added sugars to 6% of their daily calories—down from the current guideline of 10%—is spotlighting the growing toll of obesity on the nation’s health, and drawing pushback from makers of candy and sodas.

The guidance, from a committee’s recommendations for new U.S. dietary guidelines, aims to address rising rates of obesity and the poor quality of most Americans’ diets. Obesity has been linked to an increased risk of health problems, including Type 2 diabetes, heart disease and cancer—and raises the risk for severe illness with Covid-19.

“One of the biggest health challenges related to nutrition in this country is overweight and obesity,” says Elizabeth J. Mayer-Davis, chair of the nutrition department at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, who chaired the federal committee’s beverages and added sugars subcommittee.

Most Americans aren’t even limiting their added sugar to the current 10% guideline. Nearly two-thirds of people age 1 and older consumed more than 10% of their daily calories in added sugar, according to 2013-2016 data analyzed by the committee. The mean consumption is 13%.

More than 70% of U.S. adults ages 20 and older are overweight or obese, according to 2015-2016 figures from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. About 42% are obese, according to 2017-2018 CDC data. Nearly 14% of children ages 2 to 5 are obese, as are about 18% of 6-to-11-year-olds and about 21% of 12-to-19-year-olds. The subcommittee is recommending that toddlers under age 2 not consume any added sugar. These will be the first federal dietary guidelines to include recommendations for children under 2.

The new limit applies only to added sugars, found in processed foods from soda and pasta sauce to cereal and yogurt, as well as honey and sugar itself. The primary source of added sugars in Americans’ diets is sugar-sweetened beverages. A 16-ounce “grande” pumpkin spice latte at Starbucks, for example, has 50 grams of sugar, or 10% of a 2,000 calorie diet. Other main sources are desserts, candy, coffee and tea with added sugar, and breakfast cereals and bars.

The committee isn’t discouraging intake of foods that naturally contain sugar, like fruit and milk, because it says those foods provide other nutritional benefits and that most Americans aren’t eating enough of them. Overall, the committee wants Americans to eat more foods that are included in diets associated with good health outcomes—which it says are rich in vegetables, fruits, whole grains, and lean meat and poultry—and fewer foods linked to poor health, including sugar-sweetened foods and drinks, refined grains and large amounts of red meat. “The first concern is for people to choose a healthy diet that will promote their long-term health, growth and development,” says Dr. Mayer-Davis.

The new recommendation for added sugars is part of the process of a coming revision of the U.S. government’s Dietary Guidelines for Americans, which is updated every five years. The committee released its recommendations in July; now the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the Department of Health and Human Services will review them and issue final guidelines by the end of the year.

The dietary guidelines have a broad impact: They help dictate school lunch programs, shape state and local health promotion efforts and influence what food companies make.

Food industry lobbying groups are pushing back. The American Beverage Association, which represents drink makers including Coca-Cola and PepsiCo, urged the government to keep the current 10% limit during a public meeting last month. The current limit “remains an ambitious goal,” said Maia Jack, the organization’s vice president of science and regulatory affairs, noting that beverage companies have unveiled products in smaller portion sizes and with less sugar. And she asserted that there is “no significant new science on the topic.”

The National Confectioners Association also wants to keep the 10% added sugar limit. “There was no new data raised in the committee hearings that would support” the change to 6%, said spokesman Christopher Gindlesperger.

The federal committee was made up of 20 doctors and academics. They aren’t paid for the committee work and are required to have advanced degrees and at least 10 years of experience in their fields. Anyone from the public, including food company executives and members of health advocacy groups, can nominate someone. Officials from USDA and HHS make the final selections. Ethics officials review candidates for conflicts of interest.

Dr. Mayer-Davis says the beverages and added sugars subcommittee members arrived at the new 6% limit by first modeling diets made up of healthy foods that provide necessary nutrients for a range of daily calorie levels from 1,000 calories per day to 3,200 calories per day. They calculated how many calories these healthy foods would take up for the various levels. The calories left over were “what you might call discretionary,” says Richard D. Mattes, a committee member and professor of nutrition science at Purdue University in Indiana.

For someone with a 2,000 calorie a day diet, for example, the subcommittee calculated that 1,759 of those calories, or 88%, would be taken up by healthy foods providing essential nutrients. That leaves 241 calories to be consumed as added sugars or solid fats. Based on how much Americans ordinarily consume, the subcommittee designated 133 calories, or 7%, to solid fats, and 109 calories, or 5%, to added sugars. The subcommittee settled on 6% as the general recommendation because “we weren’t trying to be unreasonable to how people eat,” says Dr. Mayer-Davis.

The subcommittee also noted that added sugars, particularly in the form of sugar-sweetened beverages, fuel obesity and raise the risk of Type 2 diabetes in adults. Obesity raises the risk for many health problems, including cardiovascular disease and many types of cancer.

“There’s no good reason to consume added sugar and there are good reasons not to,” says Alice H. Lichtenstein, a professor of nutrition science and policy at Tufts University who was not on this year’s committee.


An easy way to cut your added sugar intake is “don’t drink your calories” by avoiding sugar-sweetened beverages, says Sara N. Bleich, a professor of public health policy at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health who says the new 6% recommendation is a “very encouraging modification.” And instead of flavored yogurt, Dr. Bleich recommends buying plain yogurt and adding your own fruit.
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  #2   ^
Old Tue, Sep-29-20, 07:02
Ms Arielle's Avatar
Ms Arielle Ms Arielle is offline
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A very small change. Total focus on sugar. No mention of bread, pastries, cereals, pasta.......but those dont increase blood sugar, just cane sugar.
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  #3   ^
Old Tue, Sep-29-20, 07:29
Zei Zei is offline
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Owing to decades of saturated fat fear, they put solid fats and red meat in the same nutritional waste bin as sugar, believing they aren't healthy either. I'm going to go salvage my healthy nutritious saturated fats and red meat out of their trash heap, leave the sugar there where it belongs, and enjoy!
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  #4   ^
Old Tue, Sep-29-20, 10:06
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teaser teaser is offline
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I'm finding I'm not crazy about the term "added sugar" as opposed to "total sugar."

My grandmothers both had sugar in their tea, one teaspoon. One way to avoid "added" sugar is to switch to orange juice. Probably 20+ grams of sugar, where that teaspoon only had four. Juice, or letting somebody else sugar your beverages, you end up with more sugar than you might add yourself. Same with salt--disappeared from tables for quite a while in my family. Home cooked meals from fresh ingredients stopped tasting as good when the salt was taken away--while the producers of processed foods were free to hide as much salt and sugar in their food products as they wanted. I don't take real sugar in my tea--but I'd take a cup with a teaspoon of sugar I added myself over a cup of juice any day.
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  #5   ^
Old Tue, Sep-29-20, 14:54
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Dodger Dodger is offline
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Plan: Paleoish/Keto
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Quote:
Overall, the committee wants Americans to eat more foods that are included in diets associated with good health outcomes—which it says are rich in vegetables, fruits, whole grains, and lean meat and poultry—and fewer foods linked to poor health, including sugar-sweetened foods and drinks, refined grains and large amounts of red meat.

For some reason the fact that humans evolved eating lots of red meat seems to of no consequence to the committee members.
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  #6   ^
Old Wed, Sep-30-20, 08:25
Bonnie OFS Bonnie OFS is offline
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Plan: Dr. Bernstein
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ms Arielle
A very small change. Total focus on sugar. No mention of bread, pastries, cereals, pasta.......but those dont increase blood sugar, just cane sugar.


Wish there was a like button - failing that, I'm repeating you! I came here to say just that because I had trouble coming to grips with the idea that wheat was killing me faster than sugar. Thought I was doing well as I didn't eat all that much sugar - but bread! Oh yeah, ate a LOT of that.

Now that my adult son is home for a few months, I'm tempted by bread more than ever - he likes to bake. Husband doesn't cook much at all & learned to not bring bread into the house. I can resist store-bought cookies & muffins - they taste weird to me - but homemade? Another story!
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  #7   ^
Old Sat, Oct-03-20, 09:36
LC FP LC FP is offline
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Plan: Atkins
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Zei
Owing to decades of saturated fat fear, they put solid fats and red meat in the same nutritional waste bin as sugar, believing they aren't healthy either. I'm going to go salvage my healthy nutritious saturated fats and red meat out of their trash heap, leave the sugar there where it belongs, and enjoy!


The dietary guidelines people apparently aren't aware that excess carbs are converted into fat in your liver. Not only that, but carbs are converted into Saturated Fat. By your own liver! How repulsive. And to top it off, they're converted into Saturated Animal Fat!!!

Why would your body not comply with the dietary guidelines? Off with their livers!
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  #8   ^
Old Sat, Oct-03-20, 18:05
Ms Arielle's Avatar
Ms Arielle Ms Arielle is offline
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Plan: atkins, carnivore 2023
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Bonnie OFS
Wish there was a like button - failing that, I'm repeating you! I came here to say just that because I had trouble coming to grips with the idea that wheat was killing me faster than sugar. Thought I was doing well as I didn't eat all that much sugar - but bread! Oh yeah, ate a LOT of that.

Now that my adult son is home for a few months, I'm tempted by bread more than ever - he likes to bake. Husband doesn't cook much at all & learned to not bring bread into the house. I can resist store-bought cookies & muffins - they taste weird to me - but homemade? Another story!


You have a right to say no to baking. Really. It is your house. Really.
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  #9   ^
Old Sun, Oct-04-20, 05:16
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WereBear WereBear is offline
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Plan: EpiPaleo/Primal/LowOx
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Dodger
For some reason the fact that humans evolved eating lots of red meat seems to of no consequence to the committee members.


I've seen vegan propaganda on the subject, where anthropology and archaeology are being distorted to claim women gathered much more food than men hunted.

When I was reading science before the current low fat craze, the abundance of protein was credited with Homo sapiens sapiens developing that big brain. Took a long time
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  #10   ^
Old Sun, Oct-04-20, 06:49
Ms Arielle's Avatar
Ms Arielle Ms Arielle is offline
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Posts: 19,176
 
Plan: atkins, carnivore 2023
Stats: 200/211/163 Female 5'8"
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Progress: -30%
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If anyone has tried "gathering" food from fields and woods, it's a lot of work and little to find. IMHO supplemental. Following herds and fishing or living along coastline is how to get meat and shellfish.

Not that long ago lobsters nearly covered local beaches and was fed to prisoners.

Looking at the development of arrow tips across North America, especially US, leaves no doubt the importance of hunting.
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  #11   ^
Old Sun, Oct-04-20, 07:04
Bonnie OFS Bonnie OFS is offline
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Plan: Dr. Bernstein
Stats: 188/150/135 Female 5 ft 4 inches
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ms Arielle
You have a right to say no to baking. Really. It is your house. Really.


I finally got him re-trained to put the toilet lid down.

Now that my health is better & I'm no longer working (at temp job), I'll be taking my kitchen back. Also, he's working on making the cabin habitable - when he can move in there he can do all the baking he wants.
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  #12   ^
Old Sun, Oct-04-20, 08:30
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Benay Benay is offline
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Plan: Protein Power/Atkins
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Quote:
Originally Posted by WereBear
I've seen vegan propaganda on the subject, where anthropology and archaeology are being distorted to claim women gathered much more food than men hunted.
:


It really isn't vegan propaganda. But it does depend upon which native tribes you are talking about.

For the great plains, antelope and rabbits were the most abundant game but finding antelope was the issue. Men had to travel distances to find a herd then travel distances to bring it home

Meanwhile women and elderly stayed at home caring for children. They had to forage to eat while the men were gone. The mobile camp moved on (by foot, carrying all they owned) to another area as distant from the first as possible to find a decent forage area.

If you look at the Inuit/Eskimo they subsisted on animal foods most of the year, foraging for vegetation only in the summer months.

The environment in which people lived dictated the type of food they ate.

The plains Indians had the horse which helped immensely in hunting buffalo. Encampments were like settlements where a vegetable garden could grow

Pueblo people survived on corn, inter-pueblo (Navajo) were sheep herders.

Generalizing from the variation of foods eaten throughout north America to cite only 1 group is completely senseless.
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  #13   ^
Old Sun, Oct-04-20, 19:04
Ms Arielle's Avatar
Ms Arielle Ms Arielle is offline
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Posts: 19,176
 
Plan: atkins, carnivore 2023
Stats: 200/211/163 Female 5'8"
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Progress: -30%
Location: Massachusetts
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Dr edes ??? Studied two groups in the same state only a few mikes apart, centuries apart. One was hunter -gather, and the more recent group were farmers. The meat eaters had great teeth and bones. The grain eaters had serious health problems.

Both primative tribal groups.
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  #14   ^
Old Sun, Oct-04-20, 19:07
Ms Arielle's Avatar
Ms Arielle Ms Arielle is offline
Senior Member
Posts: 19,176
 
Plan: atkins, carnivore 2023
Stats: 200/211/163 Female 5'8"
BF:
Progress: -30%
Location: Massachusetts
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Bonnie OFS
I finally got him re-trained to put the toilet lid down.

Now that my health is better & I'm no longer working (at temp job), I'll be taking my kitchen back. Also, he's working on making the cabin habitable - when he can move in there he can do all the baking he wants.




Good for you !! Win-win
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  #15   ^
Old Mon, Oct-05-20, 05:48
Benay's Avatar
Benay Benay is offline
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Posts: 876
 
Plan: Protein Power/Atkins
Stats: 250/167/175 Female 5 feet 6 inches
BF:
Progress: 111%
Location: Prescott, Arizona, USA
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ms Arielle
Dr edes ??? Studied two groups in the same state only a few mikes apart, centuries apart. One was hunter -gather, and the more recent group were farmers. The meat eaters had great teeth and bones. The grain eaters had serious health problems.

Both primative tribal groups.


There is a great deal of evidence for the health of meat eaters over grain eaters in both cultural anthropology and archaeology that is readily available

Taubes has an entire chapter on the issue - noting the change in health of the Papago from meat eating to government food
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