Family sued after Sarah Katz died last year after drinking Charged Lemonade, apparently unaware of soda’s high caffeine content

  • subignition
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    11 year ago

    A “cup” of coffee is typically an 8 oz serving. You need to look at it per volume to make an accurate comparison.

    https://www.caffeineinformer.com/the-caffeine-database

    In mg/fl oz:

    Coca Cola is 2.8 (Diet Coke 3.8)
    Mountain Dew is 4.5
    McDonald’s drip is 9.1
    Red Bull is 9.5
    Charged Lemonade is 13
    Tim Hortons brewed coffee is 13.5
    Chick-Fil-A brewed coffee is 13.6

    So, this lemonade isn’t actually that far away from comparable drip coffee, however, I am not sure whether the nutrition facts on the 30 oz charged lemonade is going to be inclusive of ice or not. Fountain drinks typically assume a “standard” amount of ice in their calorie projections, or you will see a calorie range on their menu to accommodate the spectrum of “no ice” - “extra ice”; if the 390mg of caffeine that they give for a large charged lemonade is for a 30 fl oz with no ice at all, then a standard amount of ice could bring it down into a more reasonable territory, but…

    • stopthatgirl7
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      31 year ago

      The thing is, and something I think folks aren’t figuring, is that most people are not going to be calculating by amounts like that. If you see a drink labeled as having as much caffeine as a cup of coffee, most folks are going to the serving size you are getting has the same amount of caffeine as a cup of coffee, not that it has the same amount of caffeine per fluid ounce - that the 30 oz lemonade has the same amount of caffeine as a 8 oz cup of coffee.

      • subignition
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        11 year ago

        I think we more or less agree. The comparison to coffee is valid per volume, but that’s not a mental math step you are likely to take if you’re not thinking about it very hard.