In This ArticleView AllIn This ArticleHow Was the Study Conducted?How Does This Apply to Real Life?The Bottom Line
In This ArticleView All
View All
In This Article
How Was the Study Conducted?
How Does This Apply to Real Life?
The Bottom Line
Close
Photo:Getty Images
Getty Images
We know we’re supposed to limit the amount of added sugar we eat, but if you have a propensity toward the sweet stuff, that can be easier said than done.
Whether you prefer something fruity, likeLemon Blueberry BarsandEasy Peach Cobbler Dump Cake, or something chocolaty, likePeanut Butter Chocolate Chip CookiesandOne-Bowl Chocolate Cake, having dessert can fit into a healthy eating pattern. It’s when it’s taken to extremes that it becomes problematic.
The2020-2025 Dietary Guidelines for Americanssuggest limiting added sugar intake to less than 10% of total daily caloric intake. If you’re eating about 2,000 calories per day, that’s no more than 12 teaspoons or 48 grams of sugar a day.
TheAmerican Heart Associationhas even stricter guidelines, recommending that women consume no more than 6 teaspoons or 25 grams of added sugar per day and men stay under 9 teaspoons or 36 grams of added sugar per day.
What’s the fuss all about?
Excessive added sugar intake has been linked to several diseases, including heart disease, cancer, diabetes, high blood pressure, nonalcoholic fatty liver disease and metabolic syndrome. It can even increase your chance of gout, a form of arthritis in which uric acid forms very painful needle-like crystals in your joints.
And now, a study published on February 8, 2024, inBMC Psychiatrysuggests that there is also a link between eating too much sugar and depression.
The data for this study was drawn from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) database. It included 18,439 men and women all over the age of 20 representing a variety of races and ethnicities, including non-Hispanic White, non-Hispanic Black and Mexican-American.
Each participant completed the Patient Health Questionnaire-9, which is a quick screening assessment for depression.
Researchers also gathered information on diet through two 24-hour dietary recall interviews—which simply involved asking the person what they ate over the past 24 hours. The first was done in person at a mobile screening center. The second was done over the phone 3 to 10 days after the in-person interview.
The researchers adjusted for factors that might influence depression so that they could more closely isolate sugar as a possible cause of depression since that’s what they were testing.
After running several statistical tests on the data, researchers found a linear relationship between sugar intake and depression—meaning, that the more sugar participants ate, the greater the risk of depression.
The researchers state that more research needs to be done to determine the reason for this correlation but give several possible reasons—one of which is concerning how sugar can increase inflammation in the body. Andincreased inflammation is linked to a greater risk of depression.
Excessive sugar intake can also send yourblood sugarsoaring and then subsequently crashing. So if you’re depending on sugar-laden drinks and refined-carb foods throughout the day, you’ll be on this constant up-and-down cycle—and it’s going to negatively affect your mood and energy. And you don’t have to have diabetes to experience this.
Here’s the thing. We all have to eat to live. There is no one perfect way to eat. And life would be pretty boring without sweet treats now and then.
Behaviors are about patterns—and that includes your eating patterns. Are you regularly eating—or drinking—foods high in added sugar? Sometimes the answer to that question can be pretty obvious—like if you’re noshing on cookies and ice cream and downing a 2-liter of regular soda every day.
But added sugar can also show up in sneaky ways. For example,some “healthy” cereals have as much sugar as a doughnut, and flavored yogurt can be full of the sweet stuff, too. Many energy bars are loaded with sugar, as are energy andsports drinks, and your favorite coffeehouse concoctions.
Yes, there aremany sources of added sugar, some obvious, some not so much. And there are two primary ways to lower your added sugar intake:Increase the amount of whole foodsyou’re eating and start moderating the amount of packaged and prepared foods you’re ingesting.
It’s also helpful to have a baseline of where you’re currently at with sugar intake. Take a couple of “normal eating days,” calculate the amount of added sugar in what you eat for each day (look for the amount of added sugar in each serving size on the Nutrition Facts label and calculate it based on how big your portion size was), and then take the average of the two days.
Is it above the recommended 48-gram daily maximum? If so, consider what foods the sugar is coming from and ways you can reduce your intake of it. What can you swap that food with? Or if it’s a nonnegotiable food, can you eat less of it?
Here’s Why You Should Eat Fruit Even Though It Contains Sugar
Was this page helpful?Thanks for your feedback!Tell us why!OtherSubmit
Was this page helpful?
Thanks for your feedback!
Tell us why!OtherSubmit
Tell us why!