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Inside Reducing Sugar in Your Diet you’ll also read about...
✓ | Hidden sugar health hazards |
✓ | What happens to sugar in the body |
✓ | Sugar’s link to chronic disease |
✓ | How to reduce added sugar |
✓ | Beware of unhealthy carbs |
✓ | And so much more! |
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Dear CERASALE,
“Sugar and spice, everything nice,” the old saying goes.
But according to overwhelming evidence, there’s nothing nice about sugar when it comes to your health.
Scores of research studies have linked added sugar to obesity and diabetes — as well as high blood pressure and elevated triglycerides that can lead to heart disease.
What’s more, sugar is nothing but “empty calories” — has 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’s all in the instant-answer online guide Reducing Sugar in Your Diet.
Instant answers are just 5 minutes away!
Click here, and you can soon discover:
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 “added sugar” 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 — including 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 ...starting today!
Sincerely,
Howard E. LeWine, M.D. Chief Medical Editor, Harvard Health Publishing
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