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LifestyleHealth & Wellness

No evidence sugar-free soft drinks help us lose weight, says study of research into diet beverages’ effects

Consuming drinks made with artificial sweeteners may be as big a contributor to obesity as drinking full-sugar versions, academics say, possibly because people assume they can have more of them

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Low-calorie Coca-Cola and other such soft drinks made using artificial sweeteners won’t aid weight loss, scientists say.
The Guardian

Soft drinks made with artificial sweeteners, such as diet colas, do not help people lose weight and may be as big a part of the obesity problem as the full-sugar versions, academics have said.

A paper by researchers at Imperial College London and two universities in Brazil contends that artificially sweetened beverages, often called diet drinks, are just as big a problem as those containing sugar. There is no evidence they help people lose weight, they say, possibly because people assume they can eat more because their drinks are low in sugar.

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The report says what goes into artificially sweetened drinks, how they are consumed, and their environmental impact mean that “far from helping to solve the global obesity crisis [they are] a potential risk factor for highly prevalent chronic diseases”.

Sugar-sweetened drinks, including sports beverages, have been identified as one of the major causes of obesity. Many countries, including Mexico and France, have introduced sugar taxes to try to reduce consumption, and the UK plans to do so next year.

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