Opinion
Of Carbonated Drinks And Human Health
Meetings, birthday party and anniversary celebrations, and most other gatherings, including house opening are incomplete without them. Refrigerators, deep freezers and coolers are empty without them. They come in diffderent colours and flavours: Cola, Orange, Lemon, Pineapple, Cream Soda, Bitter Lemon, Ginger, Peach, etc. Some are sold in glass bottles of various shapes and sizes; yet others come in cans, tetrapacs and plastic bottles.
They are labelled and so called soft drinks. They are predominantly flavoured to be sweet. Some are fortified with malt. Soft drinks are heavily consumed partly because companies promote them vigorously and market them everywhere in stores, restaurants, fuel stations, markets, etc.
The companies spend hundreds of millions of naira on media advertising yearly, and hundreds of millions more on other promotional activities, which may involve sports, music, road and street shows, among others. One worrisome scenario is that companies have cashed in on the fact that Nigerians are gullible and poverty has driven many to gamble and greed to put up false promotional activities.
It remains possible that the correlation is due to a third factor: People who lead unhealthy lifestyles might consume more soft drinks. If so, then the association between soft drinks consumption and weight gain could reflect the consequences of consuming soft drinks.
It is interesting to note that experimental evidence to definitively establish the causal role of soft drinks consumption in most examined deteriorating health conditions may suffice. In fact, reviews of experimental evidence suggest that soft drinks consumption does cause weight gain but the microbial effect is often insignificant except for oveerweight individuals.
Let me cite some a few cases. Indeed, they have been a handdful of published reports linking individuals with severe hypokalemia (low potassium levels) to chronic extreme consumption of colas.
In recent years, debate on whether high calorie soft drink vending machines should be allowed in schools has been on the rise. Opponents of the soft drink vending machines believe that soft drinks are a significant contributor to so many ailments and weak health conditions. They, in fact, argue that schools have a responsibility to take care of children penchant for soft drinks, saying that allowing them easy access to soft drinks within their premises violates that responsibility and social contract with parents.
It is particularly evident that soft drinks taken three times a week can raise the chances of kidney stones. Most importantly, the ingredients used in soft drinks production seldom meet agreed specifications on all major parameters. Even the functional parameters fall short of the minimum requirements that is, the level of impurities. This has to do with the microbiological status and physical parameters such as colour, particle, size, among others.
Perhaps, it would be more easily understood with a few other explanations. A recent report has demonstrated that some soft drinks contain measurable amounts of alcohol. In fact, in some older preparations, this resulted from natural fermentation used to build the carbonation. However, modern processes introduce carbondioxide for carbonation. Even at this, they are still speculations that alcohol might result from the fermentation of sugar in an unsterile environment.
It has nonetheless been proven that the consumption of sugar-sweetened soft drinks is associated with obesity, type 2 diabetes, dental cavities, and low nutrient levels. Even some experimental studies support a causal role for sugar-sweetended soft drinks in these ailments. Though these have also been challenged by other researchers.
Be that as it may, the health effects of artificial sweetners (sodium benzonate) has been researched as a possible cause of DNA damage and hyper-activity. Other substances have further been said to have negative health effects but are present in such small quantities that are unlikely to pose any substantial health risk.
Moreover, the consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages is associated with weith gain and obesity, and changes in behaviour occasioning reduced consumption have proven to help shed weight. Obviously, each soft drink that a child adds to his or her daily consumption is accompanied by an increase in BMI of 0.24kg/m2.
It is disheartening to note that in a bid to make more profit, soft drinks companies have deviced several means and ways of pushing people to drinks more and more. To this end, they have introduced various methods of encouraging people to be addicted to their products. Some ask people to drink more to enable them win flashy cars, motorcycles, LCD TV sets, generators, and the rest, including all-expenses paid trips abroad to watch major sporting events such as the World Cup, Premier League matches, and so on. What is more: All these are aimed at maximising profit at the detriment of the gullible people’s health.
Let me point out that fizzy drinks as carbonated drinks are called, are produced by injecting carbondioxide into the drink at high pressures, usually to help dissolve the carbon ingredients. This high pressure is amassed to help dissolve the large volume of gas in the constituent ingredients, forming too much carbonic acid.
Fizzy drinks are not good to the human health as they are highly loaded with empty calories coming from refined can sugar or high fructose corn syrup. Many soft drinks are known to contain more than 10 tablespoons of sugar, unless they are fortified. However, most of them do not contain additives such as food colouring, artificial flavouring and preservatives, which some authorities find objectionable.
I believe that children who drink soft drinks flavoured with sugar tend to eat much food than those who aviod soft drinks. The reason for this is that sugared drinks cause a rise in insulin that makes adolescents more hungry, fatter and more likely to develop diabetes.
A large number of soft drinks are acidic and some have a PH of 3.0 or even lower. This is why dental experts continue to urge people to drink less soft drinks, especially between meals to prevent both tooth decay due to excess sugar and dental erosion mainly caused by the acids soft drinks contain. To avoid these effects, dentists advise using straw to ensure lack of contact with the teeth.
Experts have also warned that frequent consumption of soft drinks put victims at higher risk of kidney stones. This is because phosphoric acid which is a major component of soft drinks decreases citrate content in the urine which the body needs to protect itself from kidney stones formation, and some also contain caffeines, particularly the colas.
Methinks that although carbonated soft drinks may taste sweet in the mouth but honestly speaking, consumers are advised to drink less of these prodcuts, for the sake of their health. I think the carbonated soft drinks are a curse and not a blessing as some are wont to believe.
Akah, a Mass Communication student, Rivers State University of Science and Technology, writes from Port Harcourt.
Fortune Oronne Akah
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