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Thread: Processed Food Interesting Article

  1. #1

    Processed Food Interesting Article

    Processed Food Harmful??

    https://examine.com/nutrition/how-ha...gn=blog-051617


    The average American eats around 130 pounds of wheat flour per year, and around 65 pounds of added sugar. This begs the question: how bad are processed foods for your health?
    Now this is a trick question, we’ll just say that up front. But it’s also a very important question.
    Humans have processed their foods for thousands of years, in order to save the time and tedium of chewing tough meats and overly fibrous plants. Basically, we’re not cows, and we don’t really have the stomach or jaw to be chewing all day long.

    And while our ancestors ate a lot more unprocessed food than we do, some also supplemented their diets with flour on occasion. Flour!

    Around ten million years ago, our ape ancestors developed an enzyme to metabolize alcohol, which could be naturally found in rotten fruit. A few million years later, these occasionally drunk apes gave rise to humans who purposely processed (via fermentation) plants into beer, wine, and other alcohols.

    Fermentation of milk allowed for yogurt production stretching at least as far back as ancient India 6,000 years ago. Overall, fermentation provided not just a tangy new flavour and a bit of a buzz in some cases, but also a great way to process foods into a more well-preserved form.

    Other processing methods are also an integral part of human history, such as the widespread practice of curing meats.

    Processed foods are not new, they just make up a much larger part of our diet. Modern methods of processing differ from our ancestors as well - with less fermentation, more flour or other ultra-processing, and more monoculture (hello, corn and soy domination!).

    The overall health impact of processed foods is really hard to pin down, because there are so many different kinds of foods processed in different ways.

    So let’s start with an easily quantified harm of processing … allergens.
    Everyone knows that allergies on the rise, which is terrible for those affected (especially kids) who at risk of dying from even tiny amounts of allergens, especially peanuts.

    Unfortunately, highly processed food made in factories is at higher risk for contamination with allergens. For example, over 80% of oat samples in one study were found to be contaminated with gluten, and factories are not always careful about controlling peanut exposure.

    Outside of allergens, other risks are much harder to pin down. Processed red meat has been labeled a carcinogen by the World Health Organization, and various processed foods have been linked to a bunch of conditions … from instant noodles linked to eczema in Korea, to ultra-processed foods linked to worse cardiovascular profiles in Brazilian children.

    But what does that really mean? Most of that evidence is observational, since you can’t do a randomized trial that assigns people to eat junk food for years, and then check how bad their health gets. So we’re limited to using that evidence to generate hypotheses, and then trying to understand the mechanisms behind what happens in our bodies.

    For example, acellular carbohydrates like flour and processed sugar may predispose people to chronic disease (if eaten in large amounts) due to energy density and possible gut impacts. Large amounts of meat cooked at high temperatures can increase cancer risk through compounds like heterocyclic amines. And so on, and so on.
    The bottom line is that processed food is not inherently harmful, for two distinct reasons. First is that “processed food” isn’t one monolithic thing. Frozen mashed sweet potatoes are technically processed, but their health effect will be much different than deep fried Oreos.

    Second, chronic disease is nearly always dependant on dose: having cake on yours and your friends’ birthdays is different than eating donuts every day.

    The most prudent way to assess the risk of processed food is combining observational evidence with some some mechanistic evidence. In other words, do humans who eat varying amounts of this processed food develop disease? If so, do the mechanisms make sense for the processed food impacting physiological mechanisms that cause disease?

    To rephrase the takeaway: sugar isn’t evil, nor is flour or cured meat or other processed food. But we humans are not robots, and some people can’t stop themselves from eating too much processed food, in effect eating their way into shorter lifespans caused by chronic conditions.

    It’s wise to be aware of both the evidence and your personal food habits and triggers for overeating junk food.

  2. #2

    Re: Processed Food Interesting Article

    My worry is not with the hidden sugar salt or fat, but the nasties in food. I can control that by simply not eating as much.

    God knows what these colourings and preservatives are doing long term.

  3. #3

    Re: Processed Food Interesting Article

    Quote Originally Posted by WJ99mobile View Post
    My worry is not with the hidden sugar salt or fat, but the nasties in food. I can control that by simply not eating as much.

    God knows what these colourings and preservatives are doing long term.
    Yes your right , the allergy part was very interesting, on the link there is a graph showing the allergies in childhood persisting into adulthood. The types of processed food is also key ,and how we have been processing food in some form or shape for a very long time ,well before those held plastic containers.

  4. #4

    Re: Processed Food Interesting Article

    Best advice i got from my doctor was when he said there isn't good or bad, everything in moderation (including exercise). Don't always follow his advice myself but makes sense to me.

  5. #5

    Re: Processed Food Interesting Article

    The International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) has classified processed meat as a carcinogen, something that causes cancer. And it has classified red meat as a probable carcinogen, something that probably causes cancer. IARC is the cancer agency of the World Health Organization.

    Processed meat includes hot dogs, ham, bacon, sausage, and some deli meats. It refers to meat that has been treated in some way to preserve or flavor it. Processes include salting, curing, fermenting, and smoking. Red meat includes beef, pork, lamb, and goat.

    Bon appetit

  6. #6

    Re: Processed Food Interesting Article

    Quote Originally Posted by Rhiw-Blue View Post
    The International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) has classified processed meat as a carcinogen, something that causes cancer. And it has classified red meat as a probable carcinogen, something that probably causes cancer. IARC is the cancer agency of the World Health Organization.

    Processed meat includes hot dogs, ham, bacon, sausage, and some deli meats. It refers to meat that has been treated in some way to preserve or flavor it. Processes include salting, curing, fermenting, and smoking. Red meat includes beef, pork, lamb, and goat.

    Bon appetit
    I had to stop eating the red stuff by stomach was struggling to break it down ,terrible cramps,then eventual major landslide poos .

    Meat is tough to break down , as you get older your stomach loses its 50% of its working efficiency to do so , as a result a lot of the stuff lies rotting in your stomach area and make you ill , it was once described to me rather starkly " imagine leaving a chicken on the kitchen top for week it would rot badly " that is what could happen if your stomach if your digest system does not work efficiently , it rot in your stomach, then poisons your body through your bloods .

    That is why pineapple which contains Bromelain and Papain enzymes is well worth eating , if you go to Viva Brasil meat eating fest, last thing they give you is hot pineapple

  7. #7

    Re: Processed Food Interesting Article

    Just vary your diet and limit the size of your portions. Nothing to worry about then. I stay away from things like quorn products, they are highly processed foods......either go vegetarian or eat free range lean meat. I'm vegetarian, but still eat dairy products to keep my iron intake in check

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