Children and teens are more likely to have sugary drinks if they get fast-food combo meals that come with a beverage, a new study suggests. The findings suggest that uncoupling sugary drinks from combo meals may help reduce kids' calorie intake, the researchers said. The researchers reviewed the meal choices of483 boys and girls at McDonald's, Burger King, KFC, Wendy's or Subway locations in New York City and Newark and Jersey City, N.J.
On average, kids consumed 179 more calories overall if their combo meal
came with a soda, sweetened tea or juice, or flavored milks. They drank
82 more calories than when beverages were bought separately.
Parents who picked combo meals were 24 percent more likely than those
who ordered item by item to get a sugar-sweetened drink instead of a
non-sweetened one or no beverage.
The findings were published online Oct. 7 in the American Journal of Public Health.
"Our study strongly suggests that uncoupling sugary drinks from combo
meal deals might reduce high-calorie beverage consumption and help to
curb childhood obesity rates fueled by these kinds of liquid calories,"
senior investigator Brian Elbel said. Elbel is an associate professor of
population health and health policy at NYU Langone Medical Center in
New York City.
"Although our study does not prove cause and
effect with respect to obesity and bundled fast-food meals,
policy-makers will ideally be able to use research like ours to guide
them in formulating public health policies that may effectively decrease
consumption of unhealthy sugar-sweetened beverages," Elbel said in a
medical center news release.
Some cities have attempted to reduce consumption of supersized soft drinks by boosting sales taxes on them.
More information
The American Academy of Pediatrics has more on nutrition.
SOURCE: NYU Langone Medical Center, news release, Oct. 7, 2016
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