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Reducing Sugar in Your Diet: Practical steps to reduce your risk of chronic diseases
Reducing consumption of added sugar is a good place to start in improving the overall nutritional punch of your diet. This Harvard Medical School Guide will help you gain a deeper understanding of the different formsof sugar, what foods contain significant amounts of added sugar, how sugaris metabolized by the body, and the health risks it poses when consumed to excess. We also offer practical suggestions from Harvard experts on how to reduce your intake.
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鈥淪ugar and spice, everything nice,鈥� the old saying goes.
But according to overwhelming evidence, there鈥檚 nothing nice about sugar when it comes to your health. Scores of research studies have linked added sugar to obesity and diabetes鈥攁s well as high blood pressure and elevated triglycerides that can lead to heart disease.
What鈥檚 more, sugar is nothing but 鈥渆mpty calories鈥濃攈as little to no nutritional value and it does nothing to stave off hunger.
But how can you cut back on harmful sugar without giving up the sweetness you crave?
Now, thanks to the experts at Harvard Medical School, you can have the instant, research-backed answers you need that can have a dramatic impact on your health. It鈥檚 all in the instant-answer online guide Reducing Sugar in Your Diet.
Instant answers are just 5 minutes away!:
- Yummy foods that help short-circuit harmful sugar spikes after a meal.
- The truth about natural sugar alternatives: The straight scoop on raw sugar, honey, agave syrup and more.
- The smart artificial sweetener that makes a healthier substitute for baking sugar.
- The three secret letters that reveal sneaky 鈥渁dded sugar鈥� on food labels.
- How healthier sugar alcohols let you enjoy the sweetness of processed sugar with just half the calories. Discover the easy way to spot them on food labels.
- The biggest sources of hidden sugars鈥攊ncluding certain fruit and sports drinks, condiments, soups and yogurts.
- Sweet and tasty desserts that make filling, nutritious alternatives to traditional high-calorie fare.
- How sugar substitutes can actually work against your quest for better health.
Start now to wean yourself from health-threatening added sugar 鈥tarting today!
Prepared by the editors of 天博体育 Publishing in consultation with Frank Hu, MD, PhD Professor of Nutrition and Epidemiology, and Chair, Department of Nutrition, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School. 18 Pages (2022)
About Harvard Medical School Guides
Harvard Medical School Guides delivers compact, practical information on important health concerns. These publications are smaller in scope than our Special Health Reports, but they are written in the same clear, easy-to-understand language, and they provide the authoritative health advice you expect from 天博体育 Publishing.
- Sugar and your health
- What is sugar?
- Added sugar: Where and how much?
- What happens to sugar in the body
- Sugar and chronic disease risk
- How to reduce added sugar
- Don鈥檛 stop with sugar
- Resources
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Controlling Your Blood Pressure
An alarming one in three American adults has high blood pressure. Known medically as hypertension, many people don't even know they have it, because high blood pressure has no symptoms or warning signs. But when elevated blood pressure is accompanied by abnormal cholesterol and blood sugar levels, the damage to your arteries, kidneys, and heart accelerates exponentially. Fortunately, high blood pressure is easy to detect and treat. In the Special Health Report, Controlling Your Blood Pressure, find out how to keep blood pressure in a healthy range simply by making lifestyle changes, such as losing weight, increasing activity, and eating more healthfully.

How 鈥� and why 鈥� to fit more fiber and fermented food into your meals

UTI in older women: Why postmenopausal women are susceptible to urinary tract infection, and what to do about it

Can a routine vaccine prevent dementia?

Some adults may need a measles booster shot. Who should get one and why?

Less butter, more plant oils, longer life?

Healthier planet, healthier people

Counting steps is good 鈥� is combining steps and heart rate better?

Appendix pain: Could it be appendicitis?

Can saw palmetto treat an enlarged prostate?

How does Ozempic work? Understanding GLP-1s for diabetes, weight loss, and beyond
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