Vitamin and sports water drinks are marketed to provide consumers with energy, focus and revival, but nutritionists recently warned that they are actually filled with sugar and caffeine that provide consumers quite the opposite.
The sugar content is so high--eight teaspoons per serving in some varieties--that the Australian Dental Association wants them to carry warning labels, The Age reported.
Several other groups have agreed and expressed concern about misleading labels and marketing on products such as Glaceau Vitamin Water, Nutrient Water and Smart Water.