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- The American diet: overfed and undernourished.
Dear Reader,
What did you have for breakfast?
There’s a good chance you may have taken a bite out of a once-frozen waffle or spooned down some cereal as you got your morning started — well, if you ate your breakfast in America, that is.
In fact, it’s more like a great chance.
New evidence taken from America’s largest health survey, the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES), finds that Americans are getting a staggering amount of their calories from ultra-processed food sources.
But the bad news just keeps coming from this study.
As it turns out, all of this ultra-processed food is responsible for almost the entire amount of the additional sugar that clogs up the American dietscape. And it’s making our country unhealthy.
Today, we will provide you some examples of what these foods are and what they can do to your body.
First, let’s break down the study.
Ultra-gross
The study, from the University of São Paulo and Tufts University, was published in BMJ Open last week.
Data taken from the NHANES let researches examine the dietary habits of over 9,000 people.
After analyzing this information, they discovered 58 percent of the participants’ diets consisted of ultra-processed foods.
In addition, they found that 30 percent of the participants’ calories were coming from minimally processed foods. Processed but not ultra-processed foods made up 9.4 percent. Lastly, 3 percent consisted of “processed culinary ingredients,” like salt, oils, and sugar.
“Processed” foods are different from “ultra-processed foods.”
Let’s break it down…
Per the FDA, a food is “fresh” when it’s been recently harvested. However, I should mention, the FDA also allows foods that have been drenched in pesticides and coated in preservatives to be called “fresh.”
Minimually processed foods are things like frozen vegetables, pastas, eggs, and some meats.
Processed foods include items such as canned foods, cheese, breads, and even wine.
However, for the purposes of this study, the researchers were concerned with foods that are ultra-processed.
They define them as:
Formulations of several ingredients which, besides salt, sugar, oils, and fats, include food substances not used in culinary preparations, in particular, flavors, colors, sweeteners, emulsifiers, and other additives used to imitate sensorial qualities of unprocessed or minimally processed foods and their culinary preparations or to disguise undesirable qualities of the final product.1
Yum.
They also include examples: “Ultra-processed foods include mass-produced soft drinks; sweet or savory packaged snacks; confectionery and desserts; packaged baked goods; chicken/fish nuggets and other reconstituted meat products; instant noodles and soups.” 1
The building blocks of many Americans.
Photo credit: middleagemusclegain.com
But it’s these ultra-processed foods that are accounting for just about all of massive amounts of sugars we are eating — 90 percent, to be exact.
Sickeningly Sweet
The study found that one of every five calories in the average ultra-processed food product is due to sugar.
The 2015–2020 U.S. Dietary Guidelines and the World Health Organization both recommend that added sugars make up 10 percent or less of your daily caloric intake.
Only people who ate within the lowest 20 percent of the ultra-processed food range were in the 10 percent range for their average daily added sugar intake.
The 80 percent of those who ate the most ultra-processed foods blew right past the 10 percent limit.
As you may already know, added sugars can cause many health issues, including diabetes, obesity, tooth decay, risk of heart disease, and cancer.2
They suggest one of the main issues with the American diet is that sugar-laden, ultra-processed foods are replacing “more-nutrient-dense foods.” Because of this, Americans are “simultaneously overfed and undernourished.” 2
In conclusion of the study, the researchers suggest the obvious: The best way for you to cut out this added sugar is to reduce your intake of ultra-processed foods.
If you have any special ways to avoid processed foods you would like to share, please do!
Nmoore@lfb.org
Live well,
Natalie Moore
Managing editor, Living Well Daily
Sources
[1] ‘Ultra-processed’ foods make up more than half of all calories in US diet