Sugar is present in almost everything that we eat – from drinks to snacks, sauces, and even foods that we consider to be ...
Foods with added sugar are everywhere – even in some surprising places. So how easy is it to go without sugar and what difference can it make to your health?
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Getty Images / Design by Channing Smith When I tell my friends I have a sugar addiction, most of them scoff and say, “Well, we all ...
A friend and I were talking the other day about our addiction to sugar and fatty comfort foods (think cookies, cake, chocolate). We do so well for a while, and then somehow find ourselves back at it, ...
Do you find yourself constantly craving sweets even when you’re not hungry? Maybe you feel like you’ve lost a sense of control around certain sweet foods. You’re not alone. Many women struggle with ...
Is sugar the new nicotine … or maybe just the current scapegoat for our collective confusion over what’s “healthy?” Science can’t decide if sugar is a genuine addiction or a guilty pleasure, and our ...
It’s no secret that sugar is hard on your health. According to Harvard Health, the consequences of high sugar intake can ...
Soft drinks contain more sugar than people think. An average 12-fluid ounce can of soda has 40 grams of sugar, or the equivalent of 20 sugar cubes. According to the U.S. Department of Health and Human ...
We've survived the stretch between Thanksgiving and New Year's Day, when rich, sweet treats come at us non-stop. Now is the season of reform, when gym memberships, cleanse books and weight-loss plans ...
Are you a lifelong sweet tooth (a sugar addict)? Can’t finish a meal without something sweet to top it off? Does your stomach have a “reserve tank” purely for sweets? Me too. I could be completely ...
Bayar Baayarsaikhan, 31, has been overweight most of his life, weighing 500 pounds at his heaviest. “People often ask: When you were weighing in your 300s, didn’t you want to stop? How did this happen ...
Hoebel and researchers in the department of psychology and the Princeton Neuroscience Institute have demonstrated patterns of craving and relapse, the third and final stage of addiction, that had ...