Drinking diet soda is associated with a 50-percent increase in stroke  risk, according to a study presented earlier this month at the American  Stroke Association's International Stroke Conference in Los Angeles.
  Not surprisingly, reaction to the news among dieters has been  disparaging and defensive, as each person cycles through the Kubler-Ross  five stages of grief, from denial and anger to bargaining, depression  and acceptance.
  "Now the health police tell us we can't drink Diet Coke," captures the tone on many of the diet blogs.
  If it's any consolation for diet-soda fans,  the results presented at the meeting — based on preliminary analysis  from a 2,500-person subset of the ongoing Northern Manhattan Study  (NOMAS) — are far from definitive. There's no way to tell yet, for  example, what ingredient would be associated with strokes or whether  lifestyle choices among drinkers are the real cause.
  That said, is drinking diet soda safe? Of course not, especially when  it is the main source of liquid refreshment every day. You're drinking  copious amounts of phosphoric acid, artificial colors, artificial  flavors, and some laboratory-crafted chemical that tricks your brain into perceiving the sensation of sweet.
  Diet soda is an alternative to regular soda, but neither is healthy.  You are merely trading calories from sugar for chemicals of questionable  nature.
  Hooked on sugar
  The proliferation of diet soda cuts to the core of what's wrong with the Western diet.  The Western approach is to remove the most obvious dangers from an  unhealthy habit — in this case, removing the 12 teaspoons of sugar per  can of fizzy water laced with acids, colors and flavors of uncertain origin — so that we can continue that habit in denial of other dangers.
  The underlying problem is that we are addicted to sugar;  beverages without a sweetener now seem bland. For the first million  years or so of pre-human and human existence, water was adequate to  quench our thirst. But apparently no longer.
  Hold the sugar and corn syrup and pass the aspartame. Some doctors  actually encourage dieters to drink diet soda to cut calories instead of  recommending zero-calorie water or tea.
  We see this "short-cut" diet phenomenon also among some people who want  to be vegetarian. They eat vegetarian hot dogs and other faux-meat  dishes made from heavily processed soy and vegetable meal loaded with  salt, sugar and fat. This is likely unhealthier than the meat they are  shunning.
  So, similarly, at issue is that we are so addicted to meat that meals  without it no longer seem satiating. To do vegetarianism right, you'd  have to learn how to cook lentils, beans, grains and other staples of a  vegetarian diet, and that's too consuming for many people.
  Writing on the wall
  Studies on diet soda have been flawed, because researchers have  discounted one important fact: Those drinking diet soda likely drink it  not because they are health nuts but because they have a certain health  condition. They are either overweight or diabetic. Thus, they are at  risk for strokes, heart attacks and cancer regardless of the type of  beverage they prefer.
  One of the more impressive aspects of the NOMAS project is that  researchers can control for weight and other health conditions. It's  inevitable that NOMAS and similar studies will tease out the dangers of  drinking too much soda in general, either diet or regular.
  It is a shame the United States cannot adopt Asia's tradition of  unsweetened teas, ubiquitous in shops and vending machines. But even  otherwise healthy green tea in the United States is tainted with sugar  or artificial sweetener — yet another example of corrupting a healthy  alternative.
  The bottom line is that dieters need to cycle through those Kubler-Ross  stages to reach acceptance: Diet soda is no healthy alternative, and  nothing beats water.
  Christopher Wanjek is the author of the books "Bad Medicine" and "Food At Work." His column, Bad Medicine, appears regularly on LiveScience. 
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