Debunking the sugar hyperactivity myth

And yet, I'm sure countless parents will rather trust their own anecdotal experience.

Let’s cut to the chase: sugar doesn’t make kids hyper. There have been at least twelvetrials of various diets investigating different levels of sugar in children’s diets.  That’s more studies than are often done on drugs. None of them detected any differences in behavior between children who had eaten sugar and those who hadn’t.  These studies included sugar from candy, chocolate, and natural sources.  Some of them were short-term, and some of them were long term. Some of them focused on children with ADHD. Some of them even included only children who were considered “sensitive” to sugar. In all of them, children did not behave differently after eating something full of sugar or something sugar-free.

Sugar, and candy, do not make kids hyper

Tags:

Related Items

Perceptive and made me chuckle. Meanwhile my smartphone will be lucky to...
Anyone who can work in two in-context Monty Python references deserves to be...
While its hard to read the press release from the World Health organization...
We've done a number of energy-efficiency projects at our house over the...
If you read one article about the ingredients in Vaccines today, it should be...
You don't need to convince me that babies are more aware/intelligent than we...

Comments

Subscribe by Email

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner