NEW
YORK - Women who chose plain water,
instead of sweet drinks such as sodas or fruit juice, had a slightly lowered
risk of developing diabetes in a large new study.
The
results, based on more than 80,000 women followed for more than a decade,
suggest that adding water to the sugary beverages a person drinks throughout
the day won't make a difference, but replacing sweet drinks with water could
help stave off the metabolic disorder.
"It
is essentially not that water helps, except with hydration, but that the others
hurt," Barry Popkin, a professor at the University of North Carolina
School of Public Health who was not involved in the study, told Reuters Health.
It's
well established that sugary beverages are bad for diabetes risk, said Dr.
Frank Hu, a professor at the Harvard School of Public Health and the senior
author of the study.
People
have recommended drinking plain water instead of sugar-sweetened beverages, he
said, "and the question is whether this kind of substitution has any
impact on diabetes."
Hu and
his colleagues collected data from the massive Nurses Health Study, which
tracked the health and lifestyle of tens of thousands of women across the US
The new
study included 82,902 women who answered questions about their diet and health
over a 12-year span.
Over
time, about 2,700 of them developed diabetes.
The
amount of water women drank didn't seem to influence their diabetes risk. Those
who drank more than six cups a day had the same risk as women who drank less
than one cup a day.
However,
sugar-sweetened drinks and fruit juice were tied to a higher risk of diabetes
-- about 10 per cent higher for each cup consumed each day.
The
research team estimated that if women replaced one cup of soda or juice with one
cup of plain water, their diabetes risk would fall by seven or eight per cent.
While
it's not a huge reduction in the risk, "because diabetes is so prevalent
in our society, even seven or eight per cent reduction in diabetes risk is
quite substantial in terms of the population," Hu told Reuters Health.
About
10 per cent of women, or 12.6 million, have diabetes in the United States.
A seven
per cent reduction would mean that instead of 10 out of every 100 women having
diabetes, the number would be closer to nine out of every 100.
Hu's
study, published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, also found that
unsweetened coffee or tea might be a good alternative to sugary beverages.
The
researchers estimated that replacing one cup of soda or fruit juice with one
cup of coffee or tea could reduce the risk of developing diabetes by 12 to 17
per cent.
Hu said
the study is important in pointing out that fruit juice is not an optimal
substitute for soda or other sugar-sweetened drinks.
"The
reality is those juices contain the same amount of calories and sugar as soft
drinks," he said.
The
bottom line, he said, is that plain water is one of the best calorie-free
choices for drinks, and "if the water is too plain, you can add a squeeze
of lemon or lime."
Reuters
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