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AMERICANS DRINK ALMOST a quarter of our daily calories, according to a new analysis of government dietary data. And when we consume sweetened, high-calorie beverages, adds a Penn State study of mealtime habits, we don't compensate by cutting back on the calories from solid food.
Those two new findings add up to a double dose of alarm about the role of "liquid calories" in the American diet.
The What America Drinks report, commissioned by the Milk Processor Education Program, used data from more than 10,000 Americans, ages four and up, collected by the government's National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) between 1999-2000 and 2001-2002. The report found that calories from beverages make up 22% of the total energy intake in the average US diet. Half of the added sugar that Americans consume comes from beverages, according to the analysis.
But many people don't "count" liquid calories-just those from foods...