Science. Sometimes it can be really annoying.
US paediatrician Howard J. Bennett has just written a piece for the Washington Post shattering the myth that sugar makes kids hyperactive.
“It doesn’t,” he says bluntly. “Lots of scientific studies have been done to answer the question, and they have all reported the same thing: Sugar does not make kids overactive.”
To be honest, this is old news. More than 20 studies in the early 1990s proved there is no link between sugar and hyperactivity. But one study, in particular, showed how strongly parents cling to this belief.
The study brought together 35 boys, aged from five to seven, whose mothers claimed that sugar made them hyper. The boys were split into two groups, with one half supposedly fed a big dose of sugar and the other half fed a placebo. In fact, all the boys were fed a placebo. The mothers who were told their sons had been fed sugar kept a closer eye on their sons and told them off more, then claimed their sons were way more hyperactive. Interesting.
Nothing to do with the sugar. Sorry. Image via iStock.
But back to Bennett. He says kids tend to eat lots of sugary foods at events like birthday parties, where they get to play with their friends in a fun environment.
"It's the party atmosphere that makes them hyperactive, not the sugar," he asserts.
Bennett adds that because people have been linking sugar and hyperactivity for decades now, it's become accepted parental wisdom, even though it's not true.