Ultra‐processed products are becoming dominant in the global food system
Universidade de São Paulo · University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Abstract
The relationship between the global food system and the worldwide rapid increase of obesity and related diseases is not yet well understood. A reason is that the full impact of industrialized food processing on dietary patterns, including the environments of eating and drinking, remains overlooked and underestimated. Many forms of food processing are beneficial. But what is identified and defined here as ultra-processing, a type of process that has become increasingly dominant, at first in high-income countries, and now in middle-income countries, creates attractive, hyper-palatable, cheap, ready-to-consume food products that are characteristically energy-dense, fatty, sugary or salty and generally obesogenic.…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 45.90
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 44
Authors
5Topics & keywords
- Food processing
- Business
- Context (archaeology)
- Food systems
- Scale (ratio)
- Food products
- Consumption (sociology)
- Nutrition transition