By ahnationtalk on November 4, 2024
By ahnationtalk on November 4, 2024
By ahnationtalk on November 4, 2024
By ahnationtalk on November 4, 2024
By ahnationtalk on November 4, 2024
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SNetwork Recent Storiesby tmnationtalk on November 4, 202444 Views
Nov. 4, 2024
The holiday season is nearly upon us and it’s easy for a child’s sweet tooth go wild. However, new research shows that it may be beneficial to cut back how much sugar young children consume.
A study published Friday in the journal Science found that reducing sugar in the first 1,000 days after conception – through gestation up to age 2 – may cut a child’s risk of chronic illnesses in adulthood.
The researchers found that reducing sugar consumption in this window decreased the type 2 diabetes risk by about 35% and the risk of high blood pressure by roughly 20%. They also found a delay in disease onset of four and two years, respectively.
The research team looked at data from before and after the end of the United Kingdom’s World War II-era sugar rationing in September 1953.
In January 1940, the U.K. began rationing to allow “fair shares” of food for the country during the wartime shortage, according to the Imperial War Museums. Access to foods like sugar, fats, bacon, meat and cheese was limited.
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