is coke addictive?

are people fucking nuts? 30 years old with 8 kids, teeth rotted out, myriad health problems....gee, ya think she could have had some problems?

A New Zealand coroner has taken on the world's most valuable brand name in a case that is likely to reverberate around the world.

Southland coroner David Crerar has found that mother-of-eight Natasha Harris died from drinking too much Coke.

Ms Harris, of Invercargill, died aged 30 in February 2010. Evidence at her inquest showed she drank up to 10 litres of "classic" Coke every day – equal to more than twice the recommended safe daily limit of caffeine, and almost one kilogram of sugar.

Coca-Cola has argued that the huge quantities of Coke she drank could not be proven to have contributed to her death.

But in findings issued yesterday, Mr Crerar said Ms Harris would not have died if it wasn't for her dependence on the drink.

"I find that, when all of the available evidence is considered, were it not for the consumption of very large quantities of Coke by Natasha Harris, it is unlikely that she would have died when she died and how she died."

He said the soft drink company was not to blame for her death, although its product was a contributing factor.

He recommended the Government consider imposing caffeine and sugar warnings on soft drinks, such as those already compulsory on energy drinks.

In the months leading up to her death, Ms Harris' health had deteriorated, partner Chris Hodgkinson told the inquest. "She had no energy and was feeling sick all the time . . . She would get up and vomit in the morning."

He said her Coke habit had become an addiction: "She would get moody and get headaches if she didn't have any Coke, and also feel low in energy."

Mr Crerar found that she died from cardiac arrhythmia after Mr Hodgkinson found her slumped on the toilet, gasping for air. She suffered from a myriad medical conditions, including a racing heart and "absent teeth", which her family says had rotted out from Coke consumption.

She drank between six and 10 litres a day. Mr Crerar estimated that, at the 10l level, she was consuming 2-1/2 times the recommended daily amount of caffeine, and more than 11 times the recommended sugar intake.

Those ingredients, combined with a poor diet, caused her to develop an enlarged liver, an electrolyte imbalance and, ultimately, led to her death. She also had symptoms of caffeine overdose.

In a statement yesterday,Coca-Cola Oceania spokesman Josh Gold said the coroner should not have focused on Ms Harris' Coke "addiction", because one of the contributing expert witnesses – Professor Johan Duflou, a forensic pathologist contracted by Coca-Cola to give evidence – disagreed with the other expert witnesses.

"The coroner acknowledged that he could not be certain what caused Ms Harris' heart attack," Mr Gold said. "Therefore we are disappointed that the coroner has chosen to focus on the combination of Ms Harris' excessive consumption of [Coke], together with other health and lifestyle factors, as the probable cause of her death.

"The safety of our products is paramount . . . All of our products have a place in an active, healthy lifestyle that includes a sensible, balanced diet and regular physical activity."

Ms Harris's mother, Lynette, said on Tuesday that she did not hold Coca-Cola responsible for her death.

"It was her choice to drink Coke. She didn't like water or tea or coffee, and she didn't eat much either, and that had a lot to do with it."

Mr Hodgkinson said warning labels should be put on Coke bottles, especially for the benefit of children.

"I am glad the coroner has come to a conclusion, finally, after three years. I always knew Coke played a big part in her death.

"So long as they get the warnings out there, I will be happy. I don't want any other kids to go through what our kids have gone through."

A Ministry of Primary Industries spokesman said New Zealand shared food labelling standards with Australia, and any changes to labelling had to be agreed by both countries.

The ministry was currently chairing a trans-Tasman working group reviewing policy guidelines on the addition of caffeine to foods. Public consultation would take place in April, and Mr Crerar's recommendations would be considered as part of that review.

Mr Crerar recommends that health authorities and Coca-Cola consider issuing warnings on soft drinks.

"The hazards to the health of the consumers of excessive quantities of sugar and caffeine contained in carbonated drinks could be more clearly emphasised.

"Consideration should be given to either lowering the caffeine percentage limit or creating a more specific warning such as those printed on [energy drinks] produced and marketed by Coca-Cola."

In the coroner's findings, Professor Doug Sellman of the National Addiction Centre said Coke should be added to an international list of addictive substances.

"Growing neurobiological research is strongly indicating that some people can develop a compulsive habit related to certain highly palatable foods, that looks very similar to the same behavioural pattern observed in a drug addiction."

FAIRFAX NZ


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  • Yuk, Fenway. That looks more like Meth Mouth to me :)
    BearinFW 02/14/2013 09:04 PM
  • Put a warning on the bottles? Really? It is not already common knowledge that too much carbonated beverage is a bad thing? Ingesting too much of anything is an unhealthy habit. Hell, you can have health problems if you don't take care drinking a lot of water.

    This particular article is an argument for removing warnings and letting nature takes its course. Blaming Coca Cola for this woman's habit is the same as blaming McDonald's for overeating and getting fat.
    greyhawk 02/14/2013 03:43 PM
  • HAVE A COKE AND A SMILE.......
    fenwaydav 02/14/2013 12:47 PM
  • GOSH, i'M OLD ENOUGH TO REMEMBER A TIME WHEN PEOPLE BELIEVED THAT DISOLVING TO ASPIRINS IN A GLASS OF COCA COLA WAS SUPPOSED TO WORK LIKE AN APHRODESIAC, AND POURING A BOTTLE OF COLA ON THE HOOD OF AN AUTOMOBILE WOULD EAT THROUGH THE PAINT RIGHT DOWN TO THE METAL OF THE HOOD BELOW. tHIS OF COURSE WAS IN THE OLDEN DAYS WHEN CARS WERE MADE OF METAL NOT PLASTIC.
    NOW THIS WOMAN WHO GUZZLED ALL THIS COCA COLA OBVIOUSLY HAD SOME MENTAL ISSUES. i WORKED IN A GROUP HOME WHERE WE HAD INDIVIDUALS WHO HAD CERTAIN EATING AND DRINKING PROBLEMS THAT HAD TO BE WATCHED OUT FOR BY THE STAFF. ONE WAS A GENTLEMAN WHO WAS ADICTED TO WATER. hE HAD TO BE ESCORTED TO THE TOILET ANY TIME HE NEED TO GO BECAUSE IF WE LET HIM INTO THE BATHROOM ON HIS OWN HE'D HAVE HIS HEAD DOWN ON THE SINK SUCKING UP WATER AS FAST AS HE C0ULD GET HIS MOUTH ON THE FAUCET. THIS APPARENTLY WAS HIS WAY OF GETTING HIGH FROM 'WATER INTOXICATION'.
    iN IT'S MOST VIRULENT FORM IT CAN CAUSE DEATH. iT'S TOO COMPLICATED TO EXPLAIN HERE, BUT IF YOU LOOK IT UP ON THE INTERNET UNDER 'HOW MUCH WATER WOULD YOU HAVE TO DRINK FOR IT TO KILL YOU?' YOU WILL FIND MEDICAL EXPLANATIONS OF THIS RARE PHENOMENA (ACTUALLY LESS RARE THAN DYING FROM DRINKING TOO MUCH COCA COLA).
    AS FOR THE OBVIOUS LAWSUIT AGAINST COCA COLA IN THE OFFING, i'M REALLY LOOKING FORWARD TO THE LAWSUIT AGAINST STOUFFERS FROM KAREN CARPENTER'S FAMILY BECAUSE SHE DID NOT EAT ANY OF THEIR FOOD PRODUCTS AND THEREBY STARVED HERSELF TO DEATH. DUH.
    HOMELESSSANTACLA 02/14/2013 12:21 PM
  • @Jabert.. Very carefully. I'm sure Lindsay Lohan has some instruction manuals for that.

    And I've coined a new term for my extreme reaction to a particularly funny (to me) joke : Doing a Reverse Whitney. Basically, it's just snorting Coke, just out of the nose, rather than the other way round.

    (yeah, some people will scream blasphemy and stuff, but whatever.)
    aliencubby 02/14/2013 09:20 AM
  • Is this like that idiot who sued McDonalds for their food making her fat? Let's face it - everyone keeps telling us that excess consumption of soft drinks is bad for your health (and it does make sense, whether or not we follow the suggestion). If she was dumb enough and stubborn enough to ignore the warnings and drink coke like a fish - and excessively as that, I don't see why Coke has to take the blame.
    The doc is probably an ambulance chaser trying to make some money off this case and get some free publicity. Sure, I'm all for *all* packaged food products specifying ingredients on their labels, along with warnings, but I don't think they need to warn people against excessive consumption. We need Darwinism to work and weed out the idiots.
    aliencubby 02/14/2013 09:16 AM
  • I'm sure diet drinks aren't healthful. What artificial crap is? But some of the "studies" that have been done on them are just laughable because they don't factor in the obvious -- that people who drink diet drinks are more likely to be overweight to begin with. Some research says diet drinks make people gain weight. Well, they obviously don't just on their own, as most have ZERO calories. At any rate, you can't prove this assumption just by looking at the waistlines of people who drink them :)
    BearinFW 02/13/2013 11:51 PM
  • I looked up diet Coke and it says it was introduced in 1981. I thought it was earlier. Whenever it was, I've been drinking since than. I don't drink coffee or tea and diet Coke is what I have in the morning. Ice cold with ice cubes is my beverage of choice to get my caffeine. I have a 12 oz can with breakfast and another one for lunch. If I drink at night, it's caffeine free. I find the taste of regular Coke revolting. Technically with my lap-band surgery I shouldn't be drinking any carbonated beverage. I have giving up alcohol, drugs, cigarettes and a lot of the food I use to love. Right now the two things I am not giving up is sex and diet Coke. So in answer to the question is Coke addictive? Yes it is........
    fenwaydav 02/13/2013 11:21 PM
  • I agree with Beht on this one. Anyone with even half a brain should realize that drinking 6 or 10 liters a day of *anything*, probably including water, isn't a good thing.

    Research on diet sodas is kind of sketchy. Some think that the type of sweeteners they use may be harmful. But a lot of the research on them is tainted by faulty assumptions. There was a study a week or so ago that trumpeted that "Diet drinks cause diabetes 2." Well, only problem with that is who tends to get diabetes 2? Overweight people. Who tends to drink more diet drinks? Overweight people.
    BearinFW 02/13/2013 09:13 PM
  • Sugar is a highly refined substance... just like heroine. I'm hooked.
    PDQuesnell 02/13/2013 08:30 PM
  • Soda is basically death in a can, but I drink it sometimes, not as much as I used to.
    Funny how diet soda makes me gain weight, and if I only drink water and lay off the soda (and liquor) I lose weight.
    Marc 02/13/2013 07:32 PM