New Study Suggests: Ultra-Processed Foods 'Encourage Addiction' and Should Be Regulated ...
An experimental study looking into the health effects of a 3-week ultra-processed food diet found that such a diet impairs ...
And much of the blame for this can be placed on how we eat. The question, of course, is which part of our diets is ...
Ultra-processed foods are dangerous to our physical and mental health, contributing to obesity, diabetes, heart disease, eating disorders, anxiety, and depression.
A national survey found that many adults ages 50–80 meet clinical criteria for addiction-like responses to ultra-processed foods. Middle-aged women, especially those in Generation X, show notably ...
Eating ultra-processed foods (UPFs) could lead to an addiction disorder, a new study suggests, prompting calls for some products to be labelled as addictive. UPFs are now simply part of the flavour of ...
Eating fewer ultra-processed foods can help you better understand what’s in your food and how it’s made. Many foods that seem ...
Ultra-processed foods (UPFs) should face stricter regulation, a study has argued, after it found that they were more similar to cigarettes than to fruit and vegetables. Evidence from 50 countries now ...
Imperial academics convened global leaders across science, policy and civil society to examine the latest evidence on ...
Marketers need to pay more attention to how marketing practices normalize the consumption of products that are known to be ...
Despite its widespread use, "ultra-processed" food does not have a universal definition. U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said he’d like to define it by April. So far, ...