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The importance of the study I linked is that it examined consumption in low-income populations, and not the broader public.

As my point was that sugary drinks are often a form of caloric replacement, and not preference, for low-income people – as was my lived experience – the study was relevant as it's the type of result you'd expect were that to be the case.

I was not arguing that sugary drinks don't contribute to obesity in the general public.



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