Do We Really Want our Children Drinking Energy Drinks?
From News for Swim Parents
Published by The American Swimming Coaches Association
5101 NW 21 Ave., Suite 200
Fort Lauderdale FL 33309
By Guy Edson
I see parents walking into the swim meet with six packs of it. I see
the spent cans and empty colorful little plastic bottles under the
bleachers where the swimmers are sitting and wonder, “Why?”
What’s the point of all the swim and mental training we do? Isn’t
the point of it all to establish the life skill of understanding the
relationship between fitness, work, setting of goals, and achievement?
Where do the perceived shortcuts offered by energy drinks enter into the
equation? What part of the training do they represent?
Certainly these shortcuts do not fall under the category of good
nutrition.
Shortcuts are NOWHERE in my equation. Goals + work + fitness +
proper nutrition ==> achievement. I hate the commercials that
imply otherwise.
Unfortunately, the mentality of many is, “why not?” and, “Hey, everyone
else is doing it.”
Well, aside from the philosophical issues involved there are also
potential health issues. This alone should scare every coach and
every parent into saying “NO!” “No energy drinks, period.”
Run AWAY from them!
The respected journal Pediatrics published a “literature review” this
past week and I have reprinted three related articles below which
should, at the very least, raise a doubt in your mind about the
potential health risks of energy drinks.
(And just so we are clear, even if these energy drinks were perfectly
safe for the body, I would still be against their use as they are
intended to defeat one of the most important aspects of life -- we
WORK. We work to achieve. Shortcuts cheat us of our
self-discipline, self-reliance and our-self esteem.)
Energy Drinks May Harm Kids
Published February 15, 2011, Fort Lauderdale Sun Sentinel
Energy drinks – many of which contain herbal supplements and up to five
times the caffeine of a cola – might be quite harmful to children,
according to a literature review published in the journal Pediatrics on
Monday. Among the findings:
- Caffeine in the drinks can exacerbate cardiac conditions
especially in children with eating disorders) and interfere with calcium
absorption and bone mineralization in young adolescents.
- Additional ingredients may boost caffeine levels.
- Extra calories in the drinks can contribute to diabetes, high
body mass index and dental problems.
- The drinks are unregulated in the U.S., and the number of
overdoses of caffeine from drinking them are not known. But in
Germany, Ireland and New Zealand, officials have reported cases of liver
damage, kidney failure, seizures, confusion and arrhythmias associated
with energy drink use.
The authors concluded that energy drinks don’t have a therapeutic
benefit to kids, and they urged pediatricians to ask patients about
their energy drink consumption and let them know about potential
dangers.
Energy Drinks May Be Risky For Some With Health Problems, Study
Says
February 14, 2011 By Fred Tasker, The
Miami Herald
Energy drinks packed with caffeine and sugar may pose serious health
risks to users, especially children, adolescents and young adults,
according to a study by the University of Miami School of Medicine
reported Monday in the online version of Pediatrics, the peer-reviewed
journal of the American Academy of Pediatrics.
The study, co-written by Dr. Steven Lipshultz, chief of pediatrics at
the UM medical school, says the drinks "have no therapeutic benefit, and
many ingredients are understudied and not regulated."
An 8-ounce can of Rockstar energy drink has twice the caffeine of a
14-ounce bottle of Coca-Cola, the study notes.
The energy drink industry disputes the study's findings: "This
literature review does nothing more than perpetuate misinformation about
energy drinks, their ingredients and the regulatory process," said Dr.
Maureen Storey, senior vice president of science policy for the American
Beverage Association, in an e-mailed response.
According to Lipshultz, the drinks pose special risks for children with
diabetes, ADHD, undiagnosed heart problems and other problems.
Study: Energy drinks could pose serious health risks to children
Kelly Brewington of the Baltimore
Sun, February 15, 2011
Packed with harmful levels of caffeine, energy drinks offer no
therapeutic benefit and may put some children and young adults at risk
of health problems, according to a study published today in the journal Pediatrics.
Energy drink overdose -- causing a small body to ingest too much
caffeine and ingredients such as taurine and guarana -- could lead to
stroke, seizure and even sudden death, particularly in youth with health
problems such as diabetes, cardiac abnormalities or behavior disorders,
the study found.
Because the drinks are marketed as nutritional supplements, they aren't
subject to the same caffeine limits on soft drinks or the safety testing
of medicines, the authors write. And many drinks include ingredients
that aren't regulated or haven't been sufficiently studied, they said.
Researchers at the University of Miami came to their conclusions after a
review of published articles -- from medical journals, newspapers and
trade publications.
Young people make up about half of the huge energy drink market and
somewhere between 30 percent to 50 percent of adolescents report
consuming energy drinks, according to background information in the
study. Since energy drinks are often marketed to young people, doctors
should screen their young patients for their use and work to educate
parents and children of the potential harms, the authors write.
Folks at the American Beverage Association told the AP that the report
is simply spreading
misinformation.
Nevertheless, researchers have expressed concerns about the high levels
of caffeine in such drinks before. I wrote a few years back about a
Johns Hopkins study in which the author said the drinks should come with
labels warning of the possible health risks.
The new study comes on the heels of some local governments banning
caffeine-infused alcohol drinks, after federal warnings that they
pose health risks. While this study doesn't specifically take on this
class of drinks, it mentions that coupling energy drinks with alcohol
could only intensify the risks.





