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type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease and Sugary drinks
Sugary drinks linked to millions of new diabetes and heart disease cases globally, study finds
In Latin America and the Caribbean, sugary drinks were associated with 24% of all new diabetes cases and 11% of all new heart disease cases.
Sweet Danger: How Sugary Drinks Are Fueling Millions of New Diabetes and Heart Disease Cases Worldwide
Tufts University's research reveals that sugary drinks cause millions of new diabetes and cardiovascular cases each year worldwide. With devastating effects most pronounced in developing regions, the
Sugary Drinks Linked to Diabetes, Heart Disease. Here's What to Drink Instead
A new analysis of 184 countries linked 2.2 million cases of type 2 diabetes and 1.2 million cases of cardiovascular disease to sugar-sweetened beverages.
Diabetes and Heart Disease Rise Alongside Sugary Drink Consumption
A new study assesses the effects of sugar-laden beverages on global health, with higher rates of consumption found in Latin America and parts of Africa.
Sugary drinks may be driving millions of diabetes and heart disease cases
Sugar-sweetened beverages were responsible for an estimated 9.8% of new type 2 diabetes cases and 3.1% of cardiovascular disease cases worldwide in 2020, a new study found.
Health Matters: New study links sugary drinks to type 2 diabetes, heart disease
Millions of type 2 diabetes and heart disease cases diagnosed each year can be linked to sugar-sweetened drinks, according to a new study. Kyle Benning has the details and more in Health Matters for4.
Morning Coffee Lowers Risk Of Heart Disease
Lower Risk of Cardiovascular Disease Mortality Associated With Morning Coffee
Americans who drank coffee in the morning had a lower overall mortality compared with those who drank coffee later in the day.
Morning coffee may lower risk of heart disease-related death, research suggests
The time of day you drink a cup of coffee may lower the risk of an early death, new research suggests. The study found that people who drank coffee in the morning had a lower risk of dying from cardiovascular disease and had a lower mortality risk than all-day coffee consumers - but the research could not prove whether coffee was the sole cause.
Morning Coffee May Help You Live Longer, Reduce Cardiovascular Disease Risk
A first-of-its-kind study found that morning coffee drinkers have a lower risk of all-cause mortality and cardiovascular disease-related death compared to those who drink coffee throughout the day or not at all.
3h
Study finds 1 in 4 older U.S. veterans report cardiovascular disease diagnosis
One in four older U.S. veterans report being diagnosed with cardiovascular disease (CVD) in their lifetime, according to a ...
The American Journal of Managed Care
1h
Vitiligo Linked to Higher Cardiovascular Disease Risk
Vitiligo, a skin condition causing depigmentation, may significantly increase the risk of serious cardiovascular events.
Medical News Today
13d
Healthy breakfasts could help lower cardiovascular disease risk
For a healthy heart, the best breakfast is one that provides 20% to 30% of daily calorie intake, while wating either less or ...
News Medical on MSN
2d
Are individuals with advanced breast cancer more likely to have cardiovascular disease?
Research shows that patients with advanced breast cancer have higher odds of cardiovascular disease, emphasizing the ...
11h
on MSN
Doctor issues warning over little-known sign of heart disease that appears on ear
A doctor has warned people to look out for a certain sign on their ear, as it could be an early warning sign of heart disease ...
Hosted on MSN
15h
Lifesaving cholesterol discovery could prevent heart disease and stroke
Researchers from the University of Leicester, working with international collaborators, have unraveled a key mechanism by ...
El País in English
6d
Small? Spherical? Tilted? The shape of your heart reveals your risk of cardiovascular disease
New study links more spherical heart shapes to higher likelihood of atrial fibrillation and identifies 14 new genes ...
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Related topics
Morning Coffee
sugary drinks
breast cancer
National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey
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