How much sugar do we eat?

UK government scientists are reviewing
the amount of added sugar people should eat each day. The current guideline has a limit of 10-11%.
The World Health Organization said people should aim to get just 5% of their daily calories from the sweet stuff.
But calculating how much sugar we eat is not as simple as it sounds.
What are current guidelines?
Sugar is sugar - right? Not quite. Health professionals take a dim view of added sugars but say that naturally occurring sweetness in milk and fruit is largely fine.
Current advice says no more than 11% of a person's daily food calories should come from added sugar, or 10% once alcohol is taken into account.
That works out at about 50g of sugar for a woman and 70g for a man, depending on how active they are.
But look at the back of a food packet and you'll see a guideline amount for total sugars - including those naturally occurring in fruit and other ingredients.
While there is no UK government health guideline for total sugars, thefigure of 90g per day is used as a rule of thumb on labelling in Britain and across the EU.
That 90g equates to more than 22 small (4g) teaspoons of sugar.
90g as 22.5 teaspoons of sugar
Some sugar content is easy to work out: a 330ml can of regular Coca-Cola or Pepsi contains 35g - or almost nine teaspoons of sugar, all of it added.
But a ready meal of sweet and sour chicken can also contain more than 22g or five-and-a-half teaspoons, some of which is naturally occurring in the pineapple.
And just to confuse things further, packaging previously showed guideline daily amounts (GDA) for men, women and children but this has beenreplaced by reference intakes (RI) - which, under European legislation, can only be shown for adults.
Reference intakes are not the same as dietary reference values (DRVs), which are what health professionals use when calculating added sugars - taking us back to the 10-11%.
"It's nigh on impossible for people to work out how much added sugar they are consuming," says nutritionist Katharine Jenner, of campaign group Action on Sugar.
How much sugar are we taking in?
Soft drinks in a supermarket
Teenagers get 40% of their daily added sugar from soft drinks
All methods of assessing a population's food intake have their limitations. Anyone who has tried to keep a food diary knows how difficult it is to remember every morsel consumed: from office biscuits to the kids' leftovers.
However, the National Diet and Nutrition Survey is the most complete probing of the UK's eating habits.
Daily sugar intake by age group
The latest NDNS report found that all age groups were eating more added sugar (technically known as non-milk extrinsic sugars) than the 11% level but that children were exceeding it to the greatest degree.
Young people aged 11-18 get the most of their daily energy from sweet stuff at more than 15%. Adults are more measured, just nudging over 11%.
Where do we get it from?
Soft drinks are the biggest single source of added sugar for young people, with boys aged 11-18 getting 42% of their intake this way.
Where different ages get their sugar intake from - by food groups
Sweets, chocolate and jams made up another 19-22% of children's sugar intake and younger children also get a large proportion of their sugar from cereals - including cakes and biscuits - and fruit juice.
For adults aged 19-64, the main sources are also confectionery and jams, soft drinks and cereals. Alcohol adds another 10%.
Health effects
Scientists are still investigating whether there are direct causal links between high sugar intake and weight gain, diabetes, heart disease and other illnesses.
What is known is that eating too many calories without enough exercise can lead to obesity - and obesity is a risk factor for other conditions.
Latest figures show obesity in England climbing over recent decades before levelling off.
Chart showing rise in obesity and morbid obesity among adults
Among young children, the proportion who are obese has fallen but campaigners say more still needs to be done to reduce the amount of sugar children eat.
Chart showing rise in obesity among children

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