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Ultra-processed food linked to harm in every major human organ, study finds
(www.theguardian.com)
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rule #1: be kind
Can we stop bitching about UPF? They are tasty, so you eat a lot of them and get fat. Simple as that.
The definition itself is stupid. Bread is ultra processed. Protein powder is ultra processed. Can we focus on calory-density and taste?
Also as someone with ADHD I regularly forget to eat lunch. If I couldn't eat 2 pizzas for dinner, I would loose even more weight. This propaganda about good and bad foods has kept me underweight for most of my life.
I am still waiting for someone to standardize a definition that passes scientific rigor. The definition right now feels like "You'll know it when you see it". We've done a lot of stuff to this heavily processed item but it doesn't count, but then this minimally processed one does... When will the focus shift to the specific processes themselves that are causing issues and not a generic 'feeling' that some food or another has reached the point that it is probably not good for you.
Right now these studies are just "Food we personally feel like maybe might be bad for you proven bad" which is usually true but also not really useful. I feel like some day I'll wake up to an expose on how the whole thing is a large scale ad for the Paleo diet.
Check out the school lunch law that California passed recently, it has a pretty robust definition and even includes a list of exceptions for things that are ultra-processed but are considered worth it
It’s probably going to form the basis of a lot of research and policy going forward
We can use the glycemic index for the insulin spikes and calorie density for how much you can fit. But the taste isn't really measured I think.