California lawmaker plans hearings on soda-obesity link
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20090917/ts_nm/us_obesity_soda_california

[Finally, hope for Blair and his Mtn Dew addiction -Greg]

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - The California lawmaker who spearheaded a
high-profile anti-obesity effort across the country's most populous
state is now training his sights on sugar-sweetened drinks.

Sen. Alex Padilla, who led a campaign requiring big restaurant chains to
disclose calories in meals, said on Thursday he planned to hold hearings
in November on the link between soda consumption and obesity.

The announcement from Padilla -- who chairs the California Senate's
Select Committee on Obesity and Diabetes -- coincides with the release
of a study that shows nearly two-thirds of children aged 12 to 17 gulp
down at least one sugar-sweetened beverage daily.

According to the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research and the
California Center for Public Health Advocacy, 62 percent of children
aged 12 to 17, and 41 percent of children aged 2 to 11, drink at least
one sugar-sweetened beverage a day.

"I don't think that most parents truly appreciate the role soda pop has
in causing weight gain," Padilla said. "It is unfortunate that soda is
actually cheaper than milk and even bottled water in many instances."

California was the first state to pass menu labeling rules and has been
among the pioneers of public health initiatives such as bans on
artery-clogging trans-fats in restaurant cuisine and on soda sales in
public schools.

Experts say the U.S. obesity epidemic has turned into a public health
crisis and overweight adolescents are starting to suffer problems that
used to plague mainly middle-aged adults -- early heart disease and type
2 diabetes.

SHARP CUTBACK RECOMMENDED

The American Heart Association in August took on the $115 billion soft
drink industry, recommending that Americans cut back dramatically on
sugar and singling out soft drinks as the top source of "discretionary"
sugar calories.

The group said women should eat no more than 100 calories of added
processed sugar per day, or six teaspoons (25 grams), while most men
should keep it to just 150 calories or nine teaspoons (37.5 grams).

To put that in perspective, one 12-ounce (355-millilitre) can of soda
can contain as much as 13 teaspoons (54.6 grams) of sugar, often in the
form of high fructose corn syrup.

That's more than half the total 22 teaspoons (90 grams) or 355 calories
of added sugar consumed by the average American each day, according to a
2004 government survey.

Being overweight costs, experts say.

Obesity-related diseases account for nearly 10 percent of all medical
spending in the United States, or an estimated $147 billion annually.
Health experts increasingly are calling for taxes on soft drinks and
other sweetened beverages to offset medical costs and fund public health
efforts.

"If we are serious about curbing the obesity epidemic, we have to start
with the biggest culprit," said Harold Goldstein, executive director of
the California Center for Public Health Advocacy.

The American Beverage Association has opposed efforts to tax soda and
other beverages. An industry group called Americans Against Food Taxes
-- whose backers include soft drink maker PepsiCo Inc, the American
Beverage Association, the Corn Refiners Association and McDonald's Corp
-- has taken to the airwaves with anti-tax advertisements.
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