Diet soda, once the soft drink of choice for adults watching their calories, isn't just for grown ups anymore. Increasingly, kids are getting their fix, too.
In fact, consumption of diet drinks has doubled among U.S. children over a decade. About 1 in 4 of adults drink low-calorie or no-calorie sweetened drinks and foods. And for children: Six percent were consuming diet drinks in 1999-2000. This increased to 12.5 percent in 2007-2008. The findings were recently in The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
So, if parents are helping kids cut calories and sugar by offering diet drinks, is this good for kids' health?
"This is the $64,000 question," researcher tells The Salt. Popkin is the of The World is Fat: The Fads, Trends, Policies,and Products That Are Fattening the Human Race, and a Professor at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.
On one hand, there's some that replacing soda and juices with calorie-free beverages can help teenagers control their weight. There's also a that found diet soda drinkers were less likely to develop metabolic syndrome, as long as they were eating a prudent diet.
But on the other hand? Popkin says some people seem to use diet sodas to rationalize a very unhealthy diet the "I'll have a Diet Coke With That Big Mac" crowd.
And even though consumer concerns about aspartame linger (European regulators just for more time to study it) Popkin says "we still have no evidence of any toxicological or negative health effect of diet sweetener intake."
So where does this leave parents of the elementary school set who are increasingly seeing drinks such as Diet Sprite in the mix at parties and playground gatherings as an alternative to the high-sugar stuff?
"This is probably a step in the right direction," says , director of the Obesity Prevention Program at Harvard Medical School.
He says the current evidence suggests that full calorie sugary beverages are the most obesogenic, and water is the least obesogenic. "Somewhere in between are diet sodas." The concern is that sweetened beverages, whether with calories or not, tend to lead people to eat too much.
"I'm hoping that good old tap water becomes popular again," Gillman tells us. "It's cheap, and it hydrates the body well.
This certainly seems to be the push in many schools across the country. As schools have cracked down on vending machines, a my colleague Eliza Barclay reported on earlier this month found that restricting drink sales are helping kids limit calories and prevent weight gain.
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