Assessing evidence on health risks of ultra-processed foods

Building on warnings like the 2025 Lancet series, researchers link ultra-processed foods to health issues including obesity and cancer, though mostly via correlations. A landmark 2019 trial provides the strongest causal evidence by showing overeating on such diets. Debates continue on regulations amid concerns over practicality.

Ultra-processed foods (UPFs)—defined by the Nova system from Carlos Monteiro's group as industrially reformulated products with additives like emulsifiers and flavours—dominate modern diets. Following the 2025 Lancet series highlighting their global rise and policy needs, scrutiny of health evidence intensifies.

Over 100 observational studies correlate high UPF intake with elevated risks of cancer, diabetes, dementia, heart and bowel disease, and obesity. Limitations include reliance on self-reports and confounding by high sugar/salt/fat content. The most robust data comes from a 2019 randomised crossover trial: 20 adults ate ad libitum on matched UPF or unprocessed diets for two weeks each, consuming ~500 more daily calories on UPFs, gaining ~1kg versus losing ~1kg on unprocessed—suggesting hyper-palatability drives overeating.

Additional concerns involve processing contaminants, additives disrupting gut microbiomes, and inflammation. Countries including Brazil, Belgium, and New Zealand have revised guidelines to prioritise processing levels over nutrients alone.

Advocates push tobacco-style interventions: warnings, ad bans, school restrictions, taxes. Critics note the category's breadth (e.g., some yoghurts, wholemeal bread) and expert disagreement on classification, plus challenges for time/money-poor consumers. Most experts agree: minimising UPFs via whole foods benefits health, with occasional use tolerable.

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Split-image illustration contrasting healthy (whole grains, plants, unsaturated fats) vs. unhealthy (refined carbs, animal fats) low-carb and low-fat diets, highlighting heart disease risk reduction from food quality per recent study.
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Study links heart benefits of low-carb and low-fat diets to food quality, not macronutrient cuts

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A long-running analysis of nearly 200,000 U.S. health professionals found that both low-carbohydrate and low-fat eating patterns were associated with lower coronary heart disease risk when they emphasized high-quality foods such as whole grains, plant-based sources, and unsaturated fats. Versions of these diets built around refined carbohydrates and animal-based fats and proteins were associated with higher risk, according to a study published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology (JACC).

A bill under consideration in the Senate aims to ban the sale and advertising of ultra-processed foods in school canteens, backed by 72% of the population according to Datafolha. While health experts support the measure to fight obesity and other diseases, opponents argue it is paternalistic and advocate investing in nutritional education instead. The debate was highlighted in opinion pieces published in Folha de S.Paulo in February 2026.

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A new assessment reveals that major South African retailers offer limited access to nutritious and affordable food. The report highlights that 87% of analysed products are unhealthy, amid rising food insecurity affecting one in four households. Experts call for stronger regulations and retailer responsibilities to improve the food environment.

Colombia's National Association of Entrepreneurs (Andi), via its Food Industry Chamber, voiced concerns over a Ministry of Health resolution draft to overhaul frontal and nutritional food labeling. The business group warns the proposal would create legal and technical instability, plus economic burdens for 51,200 sector companies.

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Preliminary research from USC Norris Comprehensive Cancer Center, presented at the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) annual meeting, found that non-smokers diagnosed with lung cancer before age 50 reported eating more fruits, vegetables and whole grains—and had higher overall Healthy Eating Index scores—than the U.S. population average. The researchers emphasized that the results do not prove diet causes lung cancer and said a possible explanation could involve environmental exposures such as pesticides, a hypothesis that requires direct testing.

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