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Related: About this forumResearch pours cold water on alleged benefits of sports products
http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2012/jul/19/research-sports-products-alleged-benefitsSports drinks such as Lucozade are claimed to help users
Claims about how trainers, sports drinks and supplements will help grassroots or elite athletes train harder and achieve better times are usually based on no or flawed evidence, researchers have revealed.
Sportswear giants, such as Nike and Puma, and manufacturers of drinks, such as Powerade and Lucozade Sport, regularly insist their products confer advantages on users. But such claims are so difficult to verify because of a lack of reliable evidence to back them up that "it is virtually impossible for the public to make informed choices about the benefits and harms of advertised sports products, based on the available evidence", according to a study by a team from Oxford University and the British Medical Journal.
"There is a striking lack of evidence to support the vast majority of sports-related products that make claims related to enhanced performance or recovery, including drinks, supplements and footwear," conclude researchers led by Dr Carl Heneghan of Oxford's centre for evidence-based medicine.
Half the websites for such products provide no evidence for these claims and of those that do, half the evidence could not be critically appraised.
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Research pours cold water on alleged benefits of sports products (Original Post)
xchrom
Jul 2012
OP
Inkfreak
(1,695 posts)1. Funny, I was just discussing this with my gym buddy
Before I became a "fitness nut" I drank sports drinks all the time. Convinced it was ok. Now that I run 15-20 miles a week, I rarely if ever touch em. I prefer water. And lots of it. I do profess a love for Rockstar tho. I dunno if it qualifies as a sports drink. But I like to have 1 a day around noon to get me thru the last few hrs of work.
frylock
(34,825 posts)2. plants crave it!
HuckleB
(35,773 posts)3. That's why I send my kid to soccer camp with plenty of water.
Oh, and he gets some fruit on the drive there, after a good breakfast. Whether that helps him or not, I don't know, but it's cheaper than buying these crazy drinks.