Ultra-processed foods are industrially produced products that include ingredients not typically used in home cooking, often with long lists of unrecognizable ingredients and machinery-dependent production methods.
About 70% of the U.S. food supply is classified as ultra-processed.
They are convenient, shelf-stable, inexpensive, and allow for quick meal preparation, making them appealing to consumers. Additionally, tobacco companies, which owned food brands in the 1980s and 1990s, pioneered hyperpalatable foods, which are highly addictive.
Hyperpalatable foods are high in at least two nutrients, such as high fat and high salt, or high carbohydrate and high sugar, making them highly addictive and harder to stop eating.
Participants in the study gained two pounds in two weeks while on an ultra-processed diet, consuming 500 more calories per day than on an unprocessed diet, without realizing it.
Diet is complex, and other factors like sleep, exercise, stress, and access to healthcare can influence health. Clinical trials are needed to isolate the effects of ultra-processed foods, but such studies are difficult and time-consuming.
They may be hyperpalatable, triggering addictive responses in the brain, or they may pack more calories per bite, making it easier to consume more without feeling full.
Some countries are implementing warning labels on ultra-processed foods, limiting their marketing to children, and removing them from school meals to promote healthier eating habits.
Nutrition research has been underfunded, with much of it sponsored by food companies that have little incentive to investigate negative effects. Only about 5% of the NIH budget goes to nutrition research.
Yes, there is growing interest among addiction scientists in studying the addictive nature of certain foods, which could lead to more regulation and changes in the food environment to combat obesity.
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From the New York Times, I'm Sabrina Tavernisi, and this is The Daily. ♪♪
A new study has found that nearly three quarters of American adults are now obese or overweight. And there's been growing concern among politicians, scientists and consumers about one potential culprit. Are ultra processed foods to blame for addiction to sugar and ultra processed foods? Ultra processed foods.
ultra-processed food. We are all addicted to eating fast food and ultra-processed foods, and that is melting our brains in real time. Straight up. Today, my colleague, nutrition writer Alice Callahan, on how these foods came to be such a big part of what we eat and why that's so hard to change. It's Friday, December 13th.
Alice Callahan, welcome to the show. Thank you. It's so good to be here, Sabrina. So you cover nutrition for The Times, and you, as I understand, are uniquely qualified to have this conversation about ultra-processed foods because you literally have a PhD in nutrition. I do have a PhD in nutrition. That's right. So I started out in academia. I thought that I would be a nutrition scientist, but I
Pretty soon after, I actually decided to transition to science writing because I really wanted to be in a position where I could
read the science, talk to the scientists, and then be able to turn around and kind of interpret it for everyday people who are trying to figure out what to eat. And one of the things that we've seen in just the last few years in this field is a real change in the way we talk about food. When I was in graduate school, we were learning all about carbs and fats and protein and vitamins and minerals and how we break these nutrients down and use them in our bodies. And
Nobody at that time was talking about how foods were processed. And now, just in the last few years, we're seeing a lot of attention on how food processing might affect our health and especially this category of ultra-processed foods. And tell me about this category. What are ultra-processed foods exactly?
So ultra-processed foods are this giant category of products that include kind of anything edible that's industrially produced, things that you can't make in your own kitchen if you tried because you wouldn't be able to get the ingredients and you don't have like the machinery necessary to make that product. Okay, so these are foods that have really long lists of ingredients, the names of which you kind of don't understand what they are, right? That's right.
Okay, Alice, I went to the grocery store this morning knowing that you were going to come in and be recording with us. And we have some items here. Okay. I don't know if you can see this here. Do you see? Ringdings? Ringdings. Just a few ingredients. High fructose corn syrup, sodium aluminum phosphate, monocalcium phosphate, preservative sorbic acid,
sodium, cassonate, polysorbate 60, and dried eggs. Oh my goodness. Yeah, that's definitely ultra processed. You knew that. I did. You're right. That's why I pulled it off the shelf. I'm just going to show you here is Wonder Bread, monoglycidides. Let's see. Hold on a second. Sugar, uh,
Calcium peroxide? That sounds ultra-processed to me, Sabrina. Okay. Here's one. Looked healthy to me, and I often eat these things. Yoplait Original Made with Real Fruit Mountain Blueberry Yogurt. Okay. It has blueberries, milk, sugar, gelatin, cornstarch, pectin, natural flavor, vitamin A, acetate, and modified food starch. Yeah. So that, unfortunately, is also ultra-processed. Ah!
That is ultra-processed. Okay. So everything in my grocery cart is ultra-processed, even the yogurt. Pretty much. Yeah. So that's one thing about this category is that it's so huge and it includes lots of foods that we may think of and sort of know are not very good for us, like soda and hot dogs and chips and cookies, but also these foods like flavored yogurts, which you can have an unprocessed or a non-ultra-processed yogurt if it just has the milk and the
bacteria starter culture in it. A plain yogurt would not be ultra-processed. But once you add the flavorings and the various ingredients that give it that creamy texture, it becomes ultra-processed. A packaged big brand whole wheat bread would also be ultra-processed probably because it has a few ingredients in it like emulsifiers that are important for the texture.
And Alice, what's the universe here? Like how much of our food is ultra-processed here in America? Yeah, so here in the U.S., about 70% of our food supply would be classified as ultra-processed. 70%, 7-0. That's right, yeah. Okay, so here's my question for you.
Most people, I think, would acknowledge that ultra-processed foods are kind of bad. Now, of course, you make the point that it's a huge category, but lots of what's in ultra-processed foods isn't really something that we think generally we should be putting a lot of into our bodies. But it's everywhere. So why have these foods been allowed to proliferate like this? What is driving this kind of
expansion of these foods? So that's a great question. I think part of the answer is a business story. There's also a science part of it as well. I think the reason why these foods have come to dominate the marketplace is that they're
made to be really convenient. They're shelf stable. They're pretty inexpensive. Get the feel of wholesome refreshment with an ice cold bottle of Coca-Cola. We saw them starting to enter the scene early 1900s, really take off post World War II. Serve Campbell's cream of vegetable soup. A lot of them allow us to create meals in just a few minutes.
And so they've been very useful for people, right? And by the late 1980s, ultra-processed foods were already about 60% of our food supply. Well, already by the 80s, they were 60%. Yeah. And like if you grew up in the 80s. With Lunchables lunch combinations from Oscar Mayer, you're a lunchable. The peanut-ier difference in general.
A lot of us can look back and say like, yeah, these foods were around at that time. Reese's Pieces, the winning combination. But something about the foods also changed in the 1980s and 90s. And this is something that we're just starting to understand.
What happened was that tobacco companies, R.J. Reynolds, Philip Morris, bought up a lot of food companies. And they maybe did that because regulators were cracking down on the tobacco industry and they were diversifying their holdings a little bit. But yeah, they started buying companies like Nabisco and Kraft, right?
And scientists have found that when they look at the food brands that were owned by tobacco companies, the foods that were coming out of those companies looked really different from the other brands that were made by other companies. In what way? So the tobacco-owned products were much more likely to be something that scientists call hyperpalatable. And what's hyperpalatable?
So this is a term that was defined by addiction scientists to describe a food that has high levels of at least two nutrients. It's either high fat and high salt or high carbohydrate and high salt or high fat and high sugar. So these pairs of nutrients, you wouldn't normally find a food
in nature or like an unprocessed food that is high in two of those nutrients at the same time. And scientists think that when we eat a food that's hyperpalatable, it just makes it harder for us to stop eating it. We want it more and, you know, we reach back into the package of Oreos for another cookie.
And not all ultra-processed foods are hyperpalatable. These are kind of like two different terms, but they overlap a lot. And what you see in the 1980s and 1990s is that more and more of these ultra-processed foods were also hyperpalatable. And that seemed to be driven by the tobacco companies. They were maybe a little bit ahead of the other companies in cracking that hyperpalatability code. But biologically,
By the 2010s, basically, all of the food companies kind of get on board and bring their products up to speed. So tobacco companies kind of originally were the pioneers here bringing us, it sounds like, highly addictive food, kind of like cigarettes. Yeah, there do seem to be some parallels there.
And they take off not just in the U.S., but, you know, all around the world. We see more and more of these foods entering the food supply.
And meanwhile, obesity rates are also rising. So in the U.S., for example, our childhood obesity rates have tripled since the 1970s. Tripled.
Right. So it's become a huge problem. And we see the same thing happening in countries all around the world, although we may be a leader in this regard. And so this is where we turn from a story about the business of food to a story about health and science, because scientists are alarmed. They're scrambling to figure out why people around the world are gaining weight. Is it that we're not getting enough exercise?
Or is it our nutrition? Are we consuming too many carbohydrates or too much fat or not enough protein? But there's this one scientist in Brazil named Carlos Monteiro who starts to look at this question a little bit differently. In his country, he notices that people are consuming less traditional foods like rice and beans and more foods like instant noodles and sausages.
And so in 2009, he is the one who actually coins this term, ultra-processed food. And he creates a system to sort foods from unprocessed to ultra-processed. And so in creating this definition,
Carlos Montero and his colleagues are now able to quantify how much of the food system is coming from these foods and how has it changed over time. And that allows them to study whether or not it's linked to obesity. And they find, indeed, in Brazil, as ultra-processed food consumption goes up, so does obesity go up.
Other scientists around the world are like, "Oh, wow, this is an interesting way of looking at diet and health." And they start to see the same link between ultra-processed foods and obesity, as well as other chronic conditions like type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease, some types of cancer. And so this appears to be kind of a major breakthrough in our understanding of diet and health.
But proving that ultra processed food is causing those health conditions turns out to be a lot trickier than you might imagine. Alice, I bit into my ring ding. How is it? It's really good. It is hyper palatable, like uber hyper. We'll be right back.
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I gave my brother a New York Times subscription. She sent me a year-long subscription so I have access to all the games. We'll do Wordle, Mini, Spelling Bee. It has given us a personal connection. We exchange articles. And so having read the same article, we can discuss it. The coverage, the options, it's not just news. Such a diversified disc.
I was really excited to give him a New York Times cooking subscription so that we could share recipes. And we even just shared a recipe the other day. The New York Times contributes to our quality time together. You have all of that information at your fingertips. It enriches our relationship, broadening our horizons. It was such a cool and thoughtful gift. We're reading the same stuff. We're making the same food. We're on the same page.
Connect even more with someone you care about. Learn more about giving a New York Times subscription as a gift. At nytimes.com slash gift. Get a special rate if you act before December 26th. So Alice, what do you mean when you said it was harder than you'd think to prove that ultra-processed foods cause obesity and other health problems?
Well, this is like the eternal challenge of studying nutrition and health, right? You can observe a large number of people. You can look at how they eat and you can look at what health conditions they develop or whether they develop obesity, but proving that it's the food that causes those conditions is
is really challenging. In other words, just because people are becoming more obese over time and as a result suffering from diseases like type 2 diabetes, that doesn't necessarily mean that it's the ultra-processed foods that's causing that obesity rise.
That's exactly right. Diet is really complicated. And then food is just like one of the things that can affect our health, right? And you can imagine that people who rely more on ultra processed foods might also be the same people that are getting less
sleep and maybe exercising less or they're under more stress or they're experiencing more poverty or discrimination or less access to health care, all of these other factors might contribute to someone's health over the long term. So, Alice, how do you isolate the driver of worse health then? How do you go about doing that? So for that, you really need a different kind of study. You need a clinical trial.
In a perfect world, you can imagine if you took a large group of people and you randomly divided them into two groups and had one group consuming a diet full of ultra-processed foods and another group consuming a diet full of unprocessed foods, and you would keep them all living in the same conditions and track them for years and see, you know, who develops obesity, who develops type 2 diabetes, right?
That kind of study is obviously really hard to do over the sort of decades that it takes to develop a chronic health condition. Right. You're not really going to say, hey, 10,000 people, come live in my lab for 10 years and I'm going to control everything and you're going to eat exactly the same thing as that guy. That's exactly right. What you can do, though, is a trial kind of like that, but for a much shorter amount of time.
And so there was this small study conducted by a researcher named Kevin Hall. And what he did was recruit 20 adults to come and live at the National Institutes of Health for a month. Okay.
And each of those study subjects during their month-long stay at the NIH spent two weeks consuming a diet that was made up of unprocessed foods and two weeks consuming a diet made up of ultra-processed foods.
These diets, they were actually very carefully designed by research dieticians so that they were matched in the number of calories on the plate, the amount of carbohydrates, the amount of fat, the amount of sugar, the amount of sodium. So they really wanted to try to isolate this ultra-processed factor from the actual nutrition provided in these meals. And they told...
the study participants that they could consume as much or as little as they wanted of these foods that were placed in front of them. So what happened? What did the study end up finding? Well,
I think I should say first, too, that Kevin Hall went into this study thinking that they would find no difference in how much people consumed or whether or not they gained weight during their time at the NIH. Because the diets were so carefully matched for nutrition, he thought that was the thing that really mattered. And there wasn't really anything to this ultra-processed concept affecting people's food consumption or health.
But what he found shocked him and shocked, I think, a lot of people. He found that while people were on the ultra-processed diet, they gained two pounds in two weeks. And they ate 500 more calories per day than they did when they were on the unprocessed diet without even realizing it. Like, they had no idea that they had consumed more food.
So it's a short-term study. You don't know if that amount of sort of overconsumption of calories and weight gain might continue if the study went longer than that. But in that short amount of time, you see this really striking difference between
in how people responded to these very different types of meals. It was very clear that people ate more calories than they needed when they were served these ultra-processed meals. Okay, so in a controlled environment, in the perfect scenario, which Kevin Hall created, it is true that people do eat more calories and do gain weight from these ultra-processed foods. But do we know exactly why they do, Alice?
We don't. Kevin Hall is currently conducting a second trial to try to tease that out. And he's testing a few different ideas. One goes back to that hyperpalatability concept. So maybe it's the fact that these foods are more likely to have these pairs of nutrients that light up our brains in rewarding ways and want us to come back and consume more. Another is that
Ultra-processed foods tend to sort of like pack more calories in per bite. And so you might just subconsciously consume more of them because they kind of take up less space in your gut than an unprocessed food. If you can make ultra-processed foods that aren't hyperpalatable and don't pack as many calories in per bite, then people do seem to consume less of them. So that's giving us some hints as to what is going on.
These foods are being designed to make us want to eat them and want to eat more of them. Yeah, that certainly seems to be the case. And there's another thing about ultra-processed foods that I think scientists worry about, and many of us worry about too, is that they contain all of these ingredients that we can't pronounce. And
You know, it turns out many of them, we don't have a great grasp on how they affect our bodies. You know, we have like some small studies that show, for example, that artificial food dyes maybe affect children's behavior artificially.
artificial sweeteners, maybe change our microbiomes, you know, some of these other ingredients, maybe increase inflammation levels in our bodies. This is really emerging science, but it kind of adds to the sort of accumulated concerns about these industrially made foods.
Okay. You should have told me that before the ring ding. Sorry, Sabrina. Okay, so we know that ultra-processed foods can cause weight gain, at least according to this small study, and we're starting to get more research to understand why that happens. But why has it taken so long to get to this point?
That's another great question. I mean, nutrition science has been chronically kind of notoriously underfunded by the government. So a lot of nutrition research actually ends up being sponsored by food companies and industry groups themselves.
You can imagine that this has not been top of the list for food companies to investigate these effects. In the United States, about 5% of the National Institutes of Health budget goes towards nutrition research. And I think there's a growing recognition that we may need to invest more in understanding this issue if we're going to wrap our heads around nutrition.
what the problem is with these foods and what we could do about it. What does that growing recognition look like? What's happening? Well, I think scientists will always say we need more research, but we're seeing countries around the world who are saying we know enough to start taking action and we can't really afford to just
let things continue as they are. So we're seeing countries, for example, putting prominent warning labels on ultra-processed foods or at least certain ultra-processed foods, like big stop signs that clearly say on the front of the package, this is not a healthy choice. We're seeing countries limit marketing of ultra-processed foods to children. And
We're seeing them get ultra-processed foods out of school meals. But here in the United States, when I talked to experts about these types of policies a couple years ago, they said it seems unlikely that a lot of those policies would really take off in the United States because we have a very strong food lobby.
But things are really shifting, I think, in this conversation. We saw it during the presidential campaign. Robert F. Kennedy Jr. campaigned pretty heavily for himself and then for Trump on this idea of making America healthy again. And he talked a lot about...
ultra-processed foods and the effects that they're having on children's health. And I think you saw that resonate with a lot of people. And politicians on both sides of the aisle are taking an interest in this. There was a hearing in the Senate last week where there were no senators who defended big food. It was kind of like, yeah, ultra-processed foods are a problem and we need to change something in this country. Yeah.
Okay, Alice, here's the part in the podcast where I ask you how you think about these foods because you're the expert. I want to probably try to avoid a lot of these foods and I want to know how you think about doing that given that they're kind of everywhere. Yeah, I think it's really tough. And we are, again, talking about 70% of the food supply. And
A lot of these foods, I, as a parent, do rely on. Things like breakfast cereal, honey nut Cheerios, my kids eat occasionally. But here's what I would say. We're still learning a lot. And one of the things we really don't know is whether or not all of these foods in this huge category of ultra-processed foods are bad for us. Like just because they're industrially produced, are they unhealthy?
Probably not. And we're talking about a category that includes everything from soda to whole wheat bread. So the way I think about them is I'm looking at sort of degrees of ultra processing. Like if it's a whole wheat bread, that the only thing that makes it ultra processed is the inclusion of like one food.
food additive that I don't recognize. I'm less concerned about that. I think try to sort out the sort of worst offenders, which are sugary drinks, ultra-processed meats like hot dogs and chicken nuggets, and then foods that obviously don't provide us with very much nutrition and are difficult to stop eating. Those are my kind of red flags for the ultra-processed foods I'm going to try to avoid.
Thinking about the future of this problem, Alice, I wonder if an analogy is the tobacco companies in the beginning of the conversation and the cigarette industry, right? That back in the beginning, the industry was incredibly well-funded. It was very difficult for scientists to prove that cigarettes were, in fact, bad for you. But eventually they did, and eventually they were regulated. And I wonder in some way if ultra-processed food might also follow that same trajectory but just kind of be at the beginning of it right now.
Yeah, I think that's quite possible. I'm seeing more and more addiction scientists who traditionally have studied substances like tobacco and alcohol now turning their attention to foods and trying to really understand the potentially addictive nature of foods. But it's...
a bit harder with food, right? Because we don't need cigarettes and we can isolate from cigarettes the addictive substance, which is nicotine. Food is different, right? Like we all need to eat and ultra processed foods are convenient and feed many of us with like the calories that we need every day. So proving that
there's an addictive nature to some foods is a bit more challenging, but there are a lot of scientists now who have taken an interest in that and are working on it. So I think we may be moving in that direction.
And there is a growing sense that, you know, this helps us make sense of the problem that we're facing. This rise in obesity, for a long time, it's been talked about as a personal failing. Like people are not exercising enough and they're eating too much. And, you know, if we're talking about living in an environment where we're surrounded by foods that are difficult to stop eating because they've been engineered that way, it's
It sort of changes the way you think about the problem and opens the door, I think, for more solutions. Like if we could change the environment so that it's not so saturated with foods that are hard to stop eating, then we may have a chance of turning the tide on obesity. Alice, thank you. Thank you, Sabrina. We'll be right back.
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This is so hysterical. I had never seen these before. They're amazing. For all of Wirecutter's gift ideas and recommendations, head to nytimes.com slash hotline.
Here's what else you should know today. On Thursday, President Biden said that he was commuting the sentences of nearly 1,500 people and pardoning 39 people in a sweeping act of clemency during his final weeks in office.
The White House said that it was the largest number of commutations by an American president in a single day. The commutations affect those who have been released from prison and placed in home confinement during the coronavirus pandemic. The pardons are for people who were convicted of nonviolent crimes, including drug offenses.
As a senator, Biden had championed a 1994 crime bill that many experts say fueled mass incarceration. He has since expressed regret for supporting that legislation, and he committed during the 2020 campaign to addressing the long drug sentences that resulted. The announcement came two weeks after Biden issued a pardon for his son Hunter, a decision that was harshly criticized by both Republicans and Democrats.
A quick reminder to catch a new episode of The Interview right here tomorrow. This week, Lulu Garcia Navarro talks with travel guru Rick Steves about why he spent his life encouraging Americans to get outside their comfort zones. You just feel so good. And you just feel like this world is such a beautiful place and it's filled with beautiful people and nature is so fragile and it's just such a delight and a blessing. It changes you.
Today's episode was produced by Alex Stern, Sydney Harper, and Ricky Nowitzki, with help from Olivia Natt and Michael Simon-Johnson. It was edited by Lisa Chow and Chris Haxel, contains original music by Dan Powell and Marion Lozano, and was engineered by Chris Wood. Our theme music is by Jim Brunberg and Ben Lansford of Wonderly. That's it for The Daily.
I'm Sabrina Taverdisi. See you on Monday.
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